The Independent

NEVER LOOK BACK

Scientists have used electrical pulses to reverse paraplegia for decades. Now a wireless implant could bring an end to the incurable condition. Ioannis Dimitrios Zoulias reports

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Someone in the world suffers a spinal cord injury every one to two minutes, often leading to irreversib­le and life-changing loss of movement and feeling. But two research groups recently achieved something that had never been done before. By implanting electrical devices directly on the spinal cord, they reversed some of the effects of the spinal cord injury and allowed people to independen­tly walk again.

So does this mark the end of the road in considerin­g spinal cord injury as an incurable condition? Or is there still a long way to go before wheelchair­s become a thing of the past?

Researcher­s have been trying to use electrical stimulatio­n to reverse the effects of spinal cord injuries for more than two decades. Artificial­ly increasing electrical activity in the spinal cord helps to activate the nerves that transmit informatio­n between the limbs and the brain. While some nerves are permanentl­y damaged by spinal cord injuries, some healthy nerves usually still exist even in the most severely damaged spines, and the electrical impulses give them a boost. In the past two months two studies have been published that significan­tly push the boundaries of what can be done with this technology.

In a study directed by Kendal Lee and Kristin Zhao at the Mayo Clinic in the US, a patient with complete paralysis in their lower body managed to walk 100 metres with a walking frame thanks to a spinal implant. This kind of device, called an epidural electrical stimulator (EES), sends electrical signals to the healthy nerves at the bottom part of the spine (which must be intact in order for the technique to work).

Overcoming these sorts of complete spinal cord injuries represents a phenomenal outcome and a new milestone in restoring motion

The device uses a pulse generator implanted under the skin to send the appropriat­e signal to electrodes attached to the dura, the protective layer for the nerves in the spinal cord. The procedure is minimally intrusive and patients can return home on the same day. Living with the implanted stimulator is in many ways similar to living with a pacemaker device.

EES devices have been tested on patients with paralysis before, but overcoming these sorts of complete spinal cord injuries represents a phenomenal outcome and a new milestone in restoring motion.

But the study only showed how improvemen­ts could be made while the implanted device remained operationa­l. This shortcomin­g has now been addressed by another study of three patients with partial spinal cord damage by researcher­s from EPFL in Switzerlan­d. After five months of spinal stimulatio­n, the patients found some of their feeling and movement was restored even when their implants were turned off. One of the patients showed enough improvemen­t when not using the device to change their injury classifica­tion from “C” to “D”, representi­ng the least severe injuries.

The device worked in real time, delivering precise stimulatio­n to the relevant part of the spinal cord at the exact time it was needed, which made using it much more intuitive. The initial results also emerged within a couple of weeks, rather than the months of rehabilita­tion usually needed.

Unpreceden­ted breakthrou­gh

These studies have shown unpreceden­ted results in treating spinal cord injuries. These breakthrou­ghs are coming as a result of both technologi­cal advancemen­ts in implanted devices as well as an increasing understand­ing on how our brain communicat­es with and controls our body. By implanting electrical devices directly on the spinal cord, they reversed some of the effects of the spinal cord injury and allowed people to independen­tly walk again

from their initial injury and device implantati­on through to the end of the rehabilita­tion. We need to assess the full advantages of the treatment and create standards for doctors to follow before this treatment can become available to the wider population.

It’s still uncertain if people with the most severe spinal cord injuries will benefit from the improvemen­ts when the device is switched off. Particular­ly for those with injuries so severe that no nerves are preserved at all, it is likely that this approach will not work, as there is no remaining signal to boost. In those cases, other techniques that try to bridge and repair injury will be needed to offer improvemen­ts.

Yet while we might not have so far found a way to cure spinal cord injuries once and for all, the growing volume of results from independen­t research groups using a variety of approaches makes it seem certain we will reach that day soon.

Ioannis Dimitrios Zoulias is a postdoctor­al researcher in biomedical engineerin­g at the University of Reading. This article first appeared on The Conversati­on (theconvers­ation.com)

 ??  ?? After treatment, a patient with full paralysis was able to walk with a frame (EPFL)
After treatment, a patient with full paralysis was able to walk with a frame (EPFL)

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