For more than a decade,
neuroscientist Grégoire Courtine has been flying every few months from his
lab at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne to another lab
in Beijing, China, where he conducts research on monkeys with the aim of
treating spinal-cord injuries. The commute is exhausting — on occasion he has
even flown to Beijing, done experiments, and returned the same night. But it
is worth it, says Courtine, because working with monkeys in China is less
burdened by regulation than it is in Europe and the United States. And this
week, he and his team report the results of experiments in Beijing, in which
a wireless brain implant — that stimulates electrodes in the leg by
recreating signals recorded from the brain — has enabled monkeys with spinal-cord
injuries to walk. “They have demonstrated that the animals can regain not
only coordinated but also weight-bearing function, which is important for
locomotion. This is great work,” says Gaurav Sharma, a neuroscientist who has
worked on restoring arm movement in paralysed patients, at the non-profit
research organization Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, Ohio The
treatment is a potential boon for immobile patients: Courtine has already
started a trial in Switzerland, using a pared-down version. Source: Guardian
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Monday, November 21, 2016
Brain implants allow paralysed monkeys to walk
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