http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/paralyzed-rats-walk-again-in-swiss-lab-study/2012/05/31/gJQAZd8p5U_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines_Fri
Paralyzed rats walk again in Swiss lab study
By Chris Wickham, Published: June 1 
LONDON — Scientists in Switzerland have restored full movement to rats 
paralyzed by spinal cord injuries, in a study that might eventually be useful 
for people with similar injuries.

Gregoire Courtine and his team at Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne saw 
rats with severe paralysis walking and running again, after a combination of 
electrical and chemical stimulation of the spinal cord together with robotic 
support.

“Our rats are not only voluntarily initiating a walking gait, but they are soon 
sprinting, climbing up stairs and avoiding obstacles,” said Courtine, whose 
results from the five-year study will be published in the journal Science on 
Friday.

Courtine is quick to point out that it remains unclear whether a similar 
technique could help people with spinal cord damage. But he adds the technique 
does hint at new ways of treating paralysis.

Other scientists agree.

“This is ground-breaking research and offers great hope for the future of 
restoring function to spinal injured patients,” said Elizabeth Bradbury, a 
Medical Research Council senior fellow at King’s College London.

But Bradbury noted that very few human spinal cord injuries are the result of a 
direct cut through the cord, which is what the rats had. Human injuries are 
most often the result of bruising or compression, and it is unclear whether the 
technique could be translated to this type of injury.

It is also not known whether this kind of electro-chemical “kick-start” could 
help a spinal cord that has been damaged for a long time, with complications 
such as scar tissue, holes and a large number of nerve cells and fibers that 
have died or degenerated.

Nevertheless, Courtine’s work demonstrates a way of encouraging and increasing 
the innate ability of the spinal cord to repair itself, a quality known as 
neuroplasticity. Other attempts to repair spinal cords have focused on stem 
cell therapy.

The brain and spinal cord can adapt and recover from small injuries. This new 
study proves that recovery from severe injury is possible if the dormant spinal 
column is “woken up.”

Norman Saunders, a neuroscientist at the University of Melbourne in Australia, 
said in an e-mailed statement reacting to the study that although it remains to 
be seen whether the technique can be used successfully on people, “it looks 
more promising than previously proposed treatments for spinal cord injury.”

Bryce Vissel, head of the Neuro­degenerative Diseases Research Laboratory at 
the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney, said the study “suggests we 
are on the edge of a truly profound advance in modern medicine: the prospect of 
repairing the spinal cord after injury.”

Courtine hopes to start human trials in a year or two at Balgrist University 
Hospital Spinal Cord Injury Center in Zurich.

— Reuters 


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