DayFR Euro

“I can feel my legs!” »: paralyzed people walk again thanks to brain stimulation | spinal cord

One hope for some people with spinal cord injuries: deep stimulation of certain areas of the brain with electrodes could help them walk more easily, according to a study and testimony released Monday.

“Now, when I see a staircase with only a few steps, I know that I can climb it alone,” says Wolfgang Jäger, one of the two patients who took part in a first test, in a video released on Monday.

“It’s nice not to have to rely on others all the time,” emphasizes this 54-year-old Swiss, for whom going up and down a few steps during vacation “was no problem” once the equipment was turned on.

Electrodes send electrical impulses to the brain

Electrodes were placed in a particular region of the brain, and are connected to a device implanted in his chest. When turned on, these devices send electrical impulses to the brain.

The experimental technique is intended for people suffering from incomplete spinal cord injuries – when the connection between the brain and spinal cord has not been completely severed – and capable of partial movements.

The Swiss team that led the study, published by Nature Medicine, distinguished itself by recent advances using implants in the brain or spinal cord to allow paralytics to walk again. This time, these researchers wanted to determine the region of the brain most involved in the healing of people with spinal cord injuries.

Using 3D imaging techniques to map the brain activity of mice with these lesions, they created a form of “brain atlas”. The region sought was found to be located in the lateral hypothalamus, known to regulate arousal, eating or motivation.

A group of neurons in this area “seems to be involved in the recovery of walking after spinal cord injury,” Grégoire Courtine, professor of neuroscience at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland), told AFP.

The researchers then sought to amplify the signal from the lateral hypothalamus by deep brain stimulation, a technique frequently used in Parkinson’s disease. Tests on rats and mice showed that electrical stimulation “immediately” improved walking, according to the study.

Climb the stairs alone

“I feel my legs,” exclaimed the first person to participate in the trial conducted in 2022 – a woman, when her device was turned on for the first time, neurosurgeon Jocelyne Bloch reported to AFP. “I feel the urge to walk,” she said once the current was increased, according to the scientist.

Patients included in the trial, who could turn on their stimulator when needed, also benefited from months of rehabilitation and strength training. For the woman, the goal was to walk without a walker; for Wolfgang Jäger, to climb the stairs alone. “Both achieved their objective,” underlined Jocelyne Bloch. Further research remains necessary, and this technique would not be effective for all patients, warned Grégoire Courtine.

As everything depends on the stimulation of the brain signal to the spinal cord, the amount of initial signal plays a role. And while deep brain stimulation is now more widespread, some people are not “comfortable” with such intervention on their brain, he added.

In the future, according to these researchers, the best option for recovering from this type of injury could be through stimulation of the lateral hypothalamus and the spinal cord.

Support Epoch Times from 1€

How can you help us stay informed?

Epoch Times is a free and independent media outlet, receiving no public support and not belonging to any political party or financial group. Since our creation, we have faced unfair attacks to silence our information, particularly on human rights issues in China. This is why we are counting on your support to defend our independent journalism and to continue, thanks to you, to make the truth known.

-

Related News :