Here is an Interesting article on IFLScience albeit two days old  I thought
I'd share.



 

Man With Severed Spinal Cord Walks Again After Cell Transplant

 

October 21, 2014 | by Stephen Luntz



A man paralyzed for two years is now walking again, albeit with a frame,
after a transplant to his spine. The treatment, to be published in this
month's Cell Transplantation, has been under discussion for a while, but has
only now shown success.

 

In 2010, Darek Fidyka was repeatedly stabbed, rendering him paralyzed from
the chest down. Fortunately, however, his nose was unscathed. 

 

Olfactory ensheathing glia (OEGs) surround olfactory axons, the nerve fibers
that conduct electrical charges from the nose to the brain to allow us to
smell. What makes them of interest to spinal patients is that OEGs maintain
their capacity to promote new neurons into adulthood. 

 

While some reptiles can grow new tails, for mammals the capacity for
regrowth is lost in most of the nervous system. Being an olfactory receptor
neuron is stressful, however, as they are forced to respond to the chemicals
drawn in with every breath. These neurons usually survive just six to eight
weeks, and require constant replacement if we are not to lose our sense of
smell. OEGs keep forming paths for new receptor neurons to transmit their
messages.

 

This capacity for regrowth has inspired spinal researchers frustrated by the
fact that the mammalian central nervous system does not regenerate axons.
The idea is that if OEGs are transplanted into the spinal cord at the point
of injury, damaged axons will start to restore themselves.

 

Animal experiments have produced axon regeneration and even enabled injured
rats and dogs to run again 

 

After the attack Fidyka was put on an intensive exercise and physiotherapy
program, without success. After two years, he was selected as the subject
for the OEG transplant trial, a joint operation between University College
London and Wroclaw University Hospital, Poland. Cells from one of his
olfactory bulbs were cultured for two weeks before being transplanted
through 100 micro-injections around the scar site.

 

[source: imgur.com]

 

To walk again Darek Fidyka had to have one of his olfactory bulbs removed
and cells from it cultured.

 

BBC TV current affairs program Panorama was invited to film his response to
the treatment, and the investment has not been in vain. At first, despite
five hours of exercise, five times a week, Fidyka showed no response, but at
the three month mark he noticed that his left thigh was putting on muscle.
After six months he was able to take faltering steps with the assistance of
leg braces and parallel bars. 

 

As the program prepares to go to air, Fidyka is able to walk on his own with
the help of a walking frame. Some bladder, bowel and sexual function has
also returned. Progress continues, and Fidyka told the BBC, "I think it's
realistic that one day I will become independent." 

 

University College's Professor Geoff Raisman, who discovered OEGs, described
Fidyka's small steps as "more impressive than man walking on the Moon."



http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/nasal-leads-paralyzed-man-walk

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