Paralysis partly reversed using
brain-machine interface training
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[August 15, 2016]
(Reuters) - Paraplegic patients
recovered partial control and feeling in their limbs after training to
use a variety of brain-machine interface technologies, according to new
research published on Thursday in the journal "Scientific Reports."
The researchers followed eight patients paralyzed by spinal cord
injuries as they adapted to the use of the technologies, which convert
brain activity into electric signals that power devices such as
exoskeletons and robotic arms.
Between January and December 2014, the patients used virtual reality
scenarios and simulated tactile feedback exercises to train their minds.
"To our big surprise, what we noticed is that long-term training with
brain-machine interfaces triggers a partial neurological recovery," said
Dr. Miguel Nicolelis, a professor of neuroscience and biomedical
engineering at Duke University, according to a statement from Duke.
"What we didn't expect and what we observed is that some of these
patients regained voluntary control of muscles in the legs below the
level of the lesion and regained sensitivity below the level of the
spinal cord injury," Nicolelis said.
The researchers believe that the training in effect rewired the
circuitry in the brain, giving it new ways to communicate with parts of
the injured body.
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"We may actually have triggered a plastic reorganization in the
cortex by re-inserting a representation of lower limbs and
locomotion in the cortex," Nicolelis said.
"These patients may have been able to transmit some of this
information from the cortex through the spinal cord, through these
very few nerves that may have survived the original trauma. It’s
almost like we turned them on again," Nicolelis said.
"It is very encouraging," Dr. Ron Frostig, a professor of
neurobiology and behavior at the University of California, Irvine,
said in an interview.
"It shows that not only can we train them to use their thinking to
activate something to help them like a robotic arm, but now we can
improve their situation even further."
(Reporting by Ben Gruber, editing by Larry King)
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