Current:Home > ScamsSpinal stimulation can improve arm and hand movement years after a stroke -CapitalEdge
Spinal stimulation can improve arm and hand movement years after a stroke
View
Date:2025-04-11 16:59:41
Pulses of electricity delivered to a precise location on the spinal cord have helped two stroke patients regain control of a disabled arm and hand, a team reports in the journal Nature Medicine.
The success should give "a lot of hope" to hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. who've been disabled by a stroke, says Dr. Walter Koroshetz, director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, which helped fund the research.
The results will need to be replicated in a larger study, Koroshetz says, adding that it's still unclear which stroke patients will benefit most from the treatment.
For Heather Rendulic, 33, one of the patients in the study, the treatment was life-changing.
As a teenager, Rendulic liked to run and ride horses. Then, beginning in 2011, she had a series of strokes caused by malformed blood vessels in her brain. The last stroke was the worst.
"I woke up and I couldn't move the whole left side of my body," Rendulic says.
Surgeons were able to remove the cluster of blood vessels that had caused her strokes. But the damage was done.
"It took me almost two years to walk on my own unassisted," says Rendulic, who wrote a book about her experiences.
Rendulic was eventually able to move her arm and hand a bit. For example, she could close her hand, but not open it. As a result, she was unable to tie her own shoes, open a jar, or chop vegetables.
"You don't realize how many things you need two hands for until you only have one good one," she says.
So nearly a decade after her strokes, Rendulic volunteered for a study at the University of Pittsburgh.
Researchers there knew that in most people like Rendulic, the brain is still trying to send signals through the spine to the muscles that control the arm and hand. Marco Capogrosso, an assistant professor in the department of neurosurgery, says the problem is that those signals are very weak.
"We wanted to pick up on these weak signals and essentially turn them into functional outputs so that a person would be able to control their own hand voluntarily," he says.
Capogrosso and a team of researchers hoped to do this by delivering pulses of electricity to nerve cells in the spine. The electricity makes these nerve cells more responsive, or excitable, which helps signals from the brain get through to the muscles they control.
When the team tried this in animals, they were able to restore arm and hand function.
"If you carefully place the electrodes inside the spinal cord, you can direct this excitability toward the muscles you need," Capogrosso says.
The team was pretty sure their approach would work in people, he says. "But we didn't expect the amount of movement recovery that we observed."
Rendulic was the first person they treated. A surgeon used a large needle to place the electrodes in her spine. "I had wires hanging out of my back," she says.
Later, in the lab, researchers turned on the stimulation. The effect was immediate.
"I was opening my hand in ways that I haven't in ten years and my husband and my mom were with us and we all were in tears," Rendulic says.
The difference is easy to see in a video made by the researchers that shows Rendulic trying to pick up a can of soup.
At first, "you can see she can't really do anything with her hand," says Elvira Pirondini, a research assistant professor in physical medicine and rehabilitation. "But when the stimulation is on she can reach the soup and she can grab the can and also elevate it."
The electrical pulses also improved something many stroke patients lose — the ability to sense the position of her arm and hand without looking at them, which comes from a sort of sixth sense known as "proprioception."
"When the stimulation was on, it was much easier for her to understand where her arm was in space." Pirondini says.
The effects of stimulation became more dramatic during the four weeks each patient had the electrodes in their spine.
"They start by opening the hand and by the end of the four weeks they can do all sorts of things," Capogrosso says.
Also, the effects diminished but did not disappear entirely when the stimulation was switched off. That suggests the pulses are causing changes to the circuits controlling the arm and hand, Capogrosso says, though it's not clear how long those changes will last.
At the end of the four-week study, the electrodes were removed from both patients. But researchers say they plan to develop a system that can be implanted permanently.
Ordinarily, moving this sort of technology from the lab to widespread use takes many years. But the process is likely to move much faster in this case because the device used to stimulate the spine is already approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating patients with chronic pain.
"There are thousands of patients implanted with this technology," Pirondini says.
Spinal stimulation has also been used to help patients paralyzed by a spinal injury regain the ability to walk.
"I don't see any deal breakers on the way of getting this to [stroke] patients," Koroshetz says.
Rendulic says her experience has changed the way she views her future, and she hopes to be first in line to receive a permanently implanted stimulator.
veryGood! (368)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, Shares How Her Breast Cancer Almost Went Undetected
- IRS whistleblower in Hunter Biden case says he felt handcuffed during 5-year investigation
- Boy reels in invasive piranha-like fish from Oklahoma pond
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- The Race to Scale Up Green Hydrogen to Help Solve Some of the World’s Dirtiest Energy Problems
- Lawmakers are split on how to respond to the recent bank failures
- 3 women killed, baby wounded in shooting at Tulsa apartment
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- In-N-Out to ban employees in 5 states from wearing masks
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Indigenous Climate Activists Arrested After ‘Occupying’ US Department of Interior
- An Oil Industry Hub in Washington State Bans New Fossil Fuel Development
- Safety net with holes? Programs to help crime victims can leave them fronting bills
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Consent farms enabled billions of illegal robocalls, feds say
- Novo Nordisk will cut some U.S. insulin prices by up to 75% starting next year
- Silicon Valley Bank failure could wipe out 'a whole generation of startups'
Recommendation
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
Habitat Protections for Florida’s Threatened Manatees Get an Overdue Update
Warming Trends: Extracting Data From Pictures, Paying Attention to the ‘Twilight Zone,’ and Making Climate Change Movies With Edge
How the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank affected one startup
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
'This is Us' star Mandy Moore says she's received streaming residual checks for 1 penny
The FDIC was created exactly for this kind of crisis. Here's the history
A Climate Progressive Leads a Crowded Democratic Field for Pittsburgh’s 12th Congressional District Seat
Like
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- The Supreme Court’s EPA Ruling: A Loss of Authority for Federal Agencies or a Lesson for Conservatives in ‘Be Careful What You Wish For’?
- Bank fail: How rising interest rates paved the way for Silicon Valley Bank's collapse