HOT DAMN !!!!!!

GIMME ME ONE


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Larry Throne 
To: [email protected]
Sent: 2/16/2007 7:53:55 PM 
Subject: [Norton AntiSpam] [TMIC] FYI


I found this in the MSN Health & fitness Web page:

Health News
 'Smart Bladder' Technology Could Help Paralyzed



Stimulating spinal cord can restore natural urination, animal study shows
-- Robert Preidt

FRIDAY, Feb. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Duke University researchers say they've 
moved a step closer in their efforts to develop a "smart bladder pacemaker" 
that could restore bladder control in people with spinal cord injury or 
neurological diseases.
The latest finding of the project, which started in 2004, shows that electrical 
stimulation of the pelvic nerve in the spinal cord can control the contraction 
and relaxation of muscles involved in bladder control.
In tests on cats, the researchers found that high frequency electrical pulses 
directed at the pelvic nerve helped empty the bladder, while low frequency 
pulses increased bladder capacity and improved continence.
This method of manipulating the nervous system is a more flexible way of 
controlling urinary function than direct bladder stimulation, said Warren Grill 
of Duke's Pratt School of Engineering.
"Stimulating the bladder directly can cause it only to contract, not to keep it 
from contracting. We stimulate the sensory inputs in the spinal cord to 
orchestrate either the inhibition or activation of urination," Grill said in a 
prepared statement.
"This illustrates an important principle: We can use the 'smarts' of the 
nervous system to orchestrate control of complex functions," he said.
It may be possible to use a similar approach to stimulate spinal reflexes that 
control movement to help people who are paralyzed, Grill said.
The research is expected to be presented Friday at the American Association for 
the Advancement of Science annual meeting in San Francisco.
More information
The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases 
explains how nerve damage/diseases affect bladder control.
content by:

SOURCE: Duke University, news release, Feb. 16, 2007









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