Diagram of Dermatomal Spinal Cord Injury

Patients' own stem cells offer a step toward improving motor, sensory function after spinal cord injury

A clinical trial enrolled 10 adults to treat paralysis from traumatic spinal cord injury, NewsMedical reports. After stem cell injection, the first patient demonstrated improvement in motor and sensory functions, and had no significant adverse effects, according to a case…
Close up of spinal implant

Micro-implant could restore spinal function in patients dealing with paralysis

Research being done at the University of Alberta could pave the way for restoring movement in patients with spinal cord injuries, Global News reports. The research involves extensive mapping of the spinal cord and using a wire thinner than a human hair which…
Neil Sachse

Spinal cord injury assessment and treatment the focus of new Adelaide clinical trial

SAHMRI and the Royal Adelaide Hospital‘s spinal unit have been given the green light for a new clinical trial. The project, spearheaded by Australian football veteran Neil Sachse’s Neil Sachse Foundation and now run by South Australia’s Health and Medical…

Headlands Distilling Co: “Why we give 20 percent of profit to SpinalCure”

Headlands, a Wollongong-based distillery, has been founded with the community positioned as a fifth business partner, such that 20 percent of the profits are donated to charity. That charity is SpinalCure and the profits are assisting with research efforts to…
Spinal cord image

US trial to compare transcutaneous and epidural spinal stimulation

A trial at the University of Washington which aims to compare two types of electrical stimulation is recruiting, to see which of these approaches is best for improving leg function in people with incomplete spinal cord injury. The trial will…

Watch the video: SpinalCure founders look back at the journey towards a cure

When SpinalCure was founded 25 years ago, the idea that a cure for spinal cord injury could one day be found was simply inconceivable. Thanks to advances in neuromodulation, cell treatments, inflammation control and technology that can bridge the gap…
Dr Dinesh Palipina on physio bike

Griffith University’s BioSpine program receives $2m grant from Insurance Commission

Griffith University, Queensland, has secured a $2 million grant from the Motor Accident Insurance Commission (MAIC) for “BioSpine: the Personalised Digital Twin for Thought-driven Electromechanical Assistive Neurorehabilitation Devices” program. The state’s first quadriplegic medical graduate, Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM, now…

SpinalCure donates $1.2m to NeuRA to research neurostimulation treatments for spinal cord injury

26 November 2019 SpinalCure Australia (SpinalCure) and Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) are delighted to announce their collaboration to further develop neurostimulation treatments for people with spinal cord injury. Once thought an impossible dream, recent breakthroughs have shown that a cure…
close up on hand electrode glove

Researchers use textile-based electrodes to regulate movements in quadriplegics

Researchers at the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, in New York, USA, have used new closed-loop neurostimulation methods and textile-based electrodes to facilitate finger movement and grasp force regulation in quadriplegic patients.  The results have been published in the Springer…

University of Louisville builds treadmill to help kids with spinal cord injuries

The University of Louisville (UofL) has built a treadmill and body support system specially made for rehabbing children with spinal cord injuries. Since 2012 UofL and the Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center (KSCIRC) have been using locomotive means for…