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Spinal injury 'bypassed' by nerve

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16 years 10 months ago #2140 by Able_Here_Team
Doctors hope to use the body's own nerves to bridge the gap in the spinal cord left by paralysing injuries.

Marie Filbin, from the City University of New York, took a nerve leaving the spine just above an injury, and reattached it below. New Scientist magazine reports that rats used in the experiment showed some signs of renewed movement. A UK expert said the injury location could govern whether a suitable nerve was available for surgery.

An injury that breaks or severely damages the spinal cord can cause permanent disability, with the extent set by exactly how far down the spine the damage has happened. Scientists are hunting for ways to repair that damage, including using growth-promoting chemicals to encourage healing across the 'gap', and grafts of nerve fibres from elsewhere in the body.
Hard job

Dr Filbin told New Scientist: \"It's amazing that the nerve bridge makes functional synapses and regenerates to the state it does.\" She warned, however, that it might not be possible for the abdominal nerve to upgrade from its more modest job to take on the sophisticated role of the spinal cord. Professor Giorgio Terenghi, from the University of Manchester, said that the approach was very interesting, and avoided some of the pitfalls of other nerve grafting techniques. \"It's a very good idea, but the key thing is how much function they will be able to restore using this technique.\" He said that another issue was that while the position of the spinal cord injury in the rats suited the use of the abdominal nerve, if the injury was elsewhere, higher or lower, there might not be a nerve that could be readily \"sacrificed\" to form the link without creating other problems. \"You don't want to rob Peter to pay Paul,\" he said.

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