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Popular News Articles
  1. Re-growing Nerves After Spinal Cord Injury
  2. Miracles Do Exist for Spinal Cord Injuries
  3. Family Rallies For Cancer Survivor Paralyzed In Crash
  4. Drug Shows Promise in Spinal Cord Injury Treatment
  5. AMERISTAR MOURNS DEATH OF CHAIRMAN AND CEO CRAIG H. NEILSEN
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Recent News Articles
Nanotechnology for Spinal Cord Injury
Published Today | November 2008 , Cure Research | Unrated
A cure for spinal injuries that leave people paralyzed, currently incurable, is being developed by Researchers at Northwestern University in Chicago. They are looking into using new nanotechnology that could enable them to completely heal cut and severed spinal cords allowing the previously paralyzed to walk again.
 
Spinal cord injury often leads to permanent paralysis and loss of sensation below the site of the injury due to damaged nerve fibers which can’t regenerate. These nerve fibers (axons) have the capacity to grow but don’t because they are blocked by scar tissue that have developed around the injury.
Nose cells may heal spine
Published Today | November 2008 , Adult Stem Cell | Unrated

People paralysed by spinal cord injuries could soon be "repaired" using cells from their own noses, say Otago University researchers.

The Health Ministry's ethics committee has just approved an application by the Spinal Cord Society to open the way for a clinical trial involving 12 patients, which could start next year.

The society's president, Noela Vallis, said there was no shortage of volunteers ready to take part.

Neurons Derived From Embryonic Stem Cells Restore Muscle Function After Injury
Published Yesterday | Embryonic Stem Cell , November 2008 | Unrated
Dalhousie Medical School researchers have discovered that embryonic stem cells may play a critical role in helping people with nerve damage and motor neuron diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), regain muscular strength.

Motor neurons reside in the spinal cord and control limb movements by enabling muscles to contract. Diseases like ALS cause them to degenerate, resulting in muscle weakness, atrophy, and eventual paralysis.
Spinal education has plenty of backbone
Published Yesterday | November 2008 , Prevention | Unrated
An education program promoting spinal injury prevention was on track to reach the major milestone of 80,000 students by the end of the year.
  
Minister for Disabilities Services, Lindy Nelson-Carr said Disability Services Queensland had provided funding of $90,000 over three years for the Spinal Injuries Association program which informs young people about spinal cord injury and how to prevent it.
Promising therapies for spinal cord injuries
Published 11/19/2008 | November 2008 , Rehabilitation | Unrated
A quarter of a million Americans are currently living with spinal cord injuries, according to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

Although most people know this type of injury can be a devastating diagnosis, not everyone knows there are many different types of spinal cord injuries. The location of the injury along the spinal cord determines what parts of the body are affected. Different types of spinal cord injuries include:

Budding web designer an inspiration to others
Published 11/19/2008 | Education , November 2008 | Unrated
WHILE Shane Agnew has faced his fair share of hurdles since sustaining a spinal cord injury that left him a ventilated quadriplegic, his sights are firmly fixed on the future thanks to his steely resolve and his training at Challenger TAFE.

Seven days after his 20th birthday in February 2005 Shane was injured in an off road motorbike accident.

He was unconscious for the next month as worried family and friends hoped he would pull through,

$1 million to fund first 12 patient treatments
Published 11/19/2008 | November 2008 , Research Funding | Unrated

New Zealand to join spinal cord repair effort

New Zealand has 5000 people in wheelchairs – one of the highest per capita ratios in the developed World

Advances towards breakthrough treatments for spinal cord injuries has encouraged the start of a fundraising initiative in New Zealand.

“We Will Walk Again,” will be a special  arm of the Spinal Cord Society of New Zealand to focus on raising money so New Zealanders in wheelchairs can take part in trials of experimental (or novel) treatments from local medical specialists.

A father's journey
Published 11/18/2008 | November 2008 , Experience | Unrated

Former Forest City resident remains hopeful for son's full recovery

Craig Olson saw the time that his mother had called on that fateful September night and knew something wasn't right.

It wasn't. His son, Tyler, had suffered a spinal cord injury on the first play of a game between Lake Mills and Forest City. The date was Sept. 5. The time of the phone call was 8 p.m. And life had forever changed.

PREMIER OPENS WORLD-LEADING SPINAL CORD INJURY CENTRE
Published 11/18/2008 | Cure Research , November 2008 | Unrated
The world’s largest, most advanced and most comprehensive facility devoted to spinal cord injury research and patient care was opened today by Premier Gordon Campbell, Rick Hansen and members of the health care and spinal cord research community.

“The Blusson Spinal Cord Centre goes beyond any other facility in the world in bringing spinal cord patients together with outstanding researchers and health-care professionals,” said Premier Campbell. 
Specialized therapy center is at the heart of foundation’s work
Published 11/18/2008 | Rehabilitation , November 2008 | Unrated

The Michael-Ryan Pattison Foundation, formerly A Cure is Coming, is the legacy of the inspirational effort of a healing community of friends who supported Woodinville resident Michael-Ryan Pattison and his family following his paralyzing injury in 2005. Pattison is convinced that the fact that he is alive today is directly related to his friends’ commitment.

He says, “I was graced to have a supportive community embrace me when this tragedy occurred, but there are many others who do not. The Michael-Ryan Pattison Foundation was created for them and it’s our mission to improve the quality of life for children and adults who become suddenly disabled, as I did.”

Rick Hansen helps open world class spinal cord research centre
Published 11/18/2008 | Research Funding , November 2008 | Unrated
Man in Motion wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen saw a dream come true Tuesday with the opening of a world-class spinal cord injury research centre in Vancouver.

The Blusson Spinal Cord Centre at Vancouver General Hospital will have more than 300 researchers looking for new ways to treat spinal injuries and providing outpatient care.

Hansen says staff at the centre will work to improve the lives of spinal cord patients and move the world closer to a cure.

Paralysis research requires a barrel of monkeys
Published 11/17/2008 | Research , November 2008 | Unrated
At the Miller Laboratory of Limb Motor Control, "monkey business" is a misnomer.

The lab, located at the Feinberg School of Medicine, is hoping to one day treat paralysis due to spinal cord injury by sidestepping the spinal cord and letting the brain indirectly control muscles through electrical stimulation.

For this reason, the lab's research is geared toward understanding the relationship between the brain and arm movement. 
3 with local ties inducted
Published 11/17/2008 | November 2008 , Advocacy | Unrated

19 honored in ceremony Monday

Three of this year's 19 inductees into the Spinal Cord Injury Hall of Fame have Lowcountry connections.

Dr. James S. Krause, scientific director of the South Carolina Spinal Cord Injury Research Fund, was among those honored Monday. The research fund is financed through $100 surcharges attached to DUI convictions.

Implant hope for paraplegics to walk again
Published 11/17/2008 | Treatments , November 2008 | Unrated

AUSTRALIA's bionic ear experts may hold the key to perfecting a technique that will allow paraplegics to walk again.

A Canadian researcher has been working for 15 years on bionic implants that use electrical signals to command "lifeless" limbs to stand and walk.

The University of Alberta's Dr Vivian Mushahwar, who arrived in Melbourne yesterday, said her work had been proven in animals and she was about three years from human trials.

Burris is living proof- LOST speaker tells Camdenton students to consider choices
Published 11/14/2008 | November 2008 , Experience | Unrated
It’s the simple things in life that frustrate him the most – changing a light bulb, visiting friends and running errands now have to be planned out.

Rusty Burris is a paraplegic, bound to a wheel chair from a spinal cord injury.

Voted by his classmates at Macks Creek as Most Friendly, Burris was looking forward to the summer of 1990 until his life changed forever.
About one-minute away from home, he fell asleep behind the wheel and ran off the road. With no seat belt on, he was thrown from the car.
“I got to spend my first summer out of high school at the University of Columbia hospital,” he said.
P.L.A.Y-ing, not just for kids anymore
Published 11/14/2008 | November 2008 , Recreation | Unrated
It’s a day that many soldiers look forward to. A day where they’ve reached the end of their service time and are able to head home and fill the gap in the family that had been missing a parent, son, daughter or spouse. It’s a time when they can finally enjoy the comforts of home cooking, melt in a warm embrace and catch their breath because of hearty laughter, not because they’re in the middle of enemy fire.

For Jeff Snover, while on military leave from serving in Iraq, was soaking up time with his family and getting a head start on some work that needed to be done on his property in Tennessee. But, while clearing out an area on his land, a tree fell, trapping him and causing a spinal cord injury, paralyzing him from the waist down.

StemCells, Inc. Announces Four Presentations at Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting
Published 11/14/2008 | Stem Cells , November 2008 | Unrated
StemCells, Inc. announced today that results pertaining to the Company's research programs in retinal degeneration as well as spinal cord injury will be presented at the Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting scheduled for November 15-19, 2008 in Washington, DC. The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization devoted to advancing understanding of the brain and nervous system. Its annual meeting is one of the leading forums for neuroscientists from around the world to present and discuss cutting-edge research in the field.
SYGNIS Receives Orphan Drug Designation from the European Commission for AX200 in the treatment of Spinal Cord Injury
Published 11/14/2008 | Treatments , November 2008 | Unrated
SYGNIS Pharma AG, today announced that it has received Orphan Drug designation from the European Commission for AX200 in the treatment of Spinal Cord Injury (SCI). This follows the positive recommendation that SYGNIS received from the EMEA in September.

Orphan Drug designation can be granted for a product that is intended for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of life-threatening or chronically debilitating conditions that affect no more than five in 10,000 people in the European Union. During the development phase certain incentives are given to the developing company to facilitate the product's registration and market authorization. 
Light revival
Published 11/13/2008 | Research , November 2008 | Unrated
Researchers are discovering how light can manipulate the nervous system

A FEW years ago researchers found a way to create a remotely controlled on-off switch in a neuron by inserting a light-sensitive gene into the nerve cell. Now the same technique has been used experimentally in laboratory rats in a study that could help with spinal-cord injuries.

When the spinal cord is severed instructions being sent from the brain are interrupted. This means not just the loss of the ability to move limbs, but also impairment of the up and down movement of the diaphragm too. This leaves patients unable to breathe on their own and often causes death.

Expert lectures on regenerative medicine
Published 11/12/2008 | Research , November 2008 | Unrated
Molly Shoichet spends her days imagining a world where victims of spinal cord injuries can walk again. A world where faulty organs can be replaced by those grown in laboratories.

A biomedical scientist at the University of Toronto and the holder of the Canada Research Chair in Tissue Engineering, Shoichet combines chemistry, biology and engineering in her lab to create polymers that aid spinal cord regeneration.
Disabled vet honored
Published 11/11/2008 | November 2008 , Independence | Unrated
Scott Cannedy receives veteran appreciation plaque from Jackson Center for Independent Living

Scott Cannedy was on a secret mission with the Green Berets in 1985 when he suffered a spinal cord injury that paralyzed him for life.

Cannedy describes himself as a "C3-C4 quadriplegic," which means his spinal cord was damaged at the third vertebrae. He can only shrug his shoulders and move his head. He uses his chin to steer his motorized wheelchair and has to have help to eat, shower and dress.

Obama may reverse many Bush actions
Published 11/9/2008 | November 2008 , Embryonic Stem Cell | Unrated
Policies on environmental, social issues could be swiftly changed

Obama himself has signaled, for example, that he intends to reverse Bush's controversial limit on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research, a decision that scientists say has restrained research into some of the most promising avenues for defeating a wide array of diseases such as Parkinson's. Bush's August 2001 decision pleased religious conservatives who have moral objections to the use of cells from days-old human embryos, which are destroyed in the process.

Stem-cell therapy in Moscow attracting patients from West
Published 11/9/2008 | Stem Cells , November 2008 | Rating:
Every three months, David Martin, a quadriplegic, returns to a small clinic here in the Russian capital for therapy he cannot legally get back home in Kalamazoo, Mich.: injections of stem cells taken from his own body, at a cost of $12,000 per visit.

Martin's U.S. doctors have tried to dissuade him from believing any improvement in his condition could be the byproduct of stem-cell treatments, a therapy not yet approved in the United States. No scientific evidence has ever shown that such treatments can repair human spinal-cord injuries, experts say.
Peer-Reviewed Flexiciser Clinical Trials Published by the Journal for Spinal Cord Medicine
Published 11/8/2008 | November 2008 , Medical Tech | Rating:
Flexiciser International which provides movement therapy solutions for people with mobility challenges today announced that its Clinical Trials have been published by the Journal for Spinal Cord Medicine. The Clinical Trials were completed by Dr. Todd Astorino, member of the Board of Directors of the American Society of Exercise Physiologists, and in collaboration with the Kinesiology Department at California State University San Marcos, and Project Walk Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Clinic. The results of this latest study demonstrate immediate benefits in Heart Rate, Blood Pressure, Ratings of Perceived Exertion and Oxygen Uptake.
Duo in 22-mile ‘crossing’ of English Channel
Published 11/8/2008 | Research Funding , November 2008 | Unrated

TWO women are swimming the width of the English Channel to raise money for a spinal cord injuries charity.

Fiona Conyers and Eleanor Coultish are among thousands of swimmers across the country who have embarked on an epic challenge to swim the 22-mile distance of the channel in their local swimming pools.

The Aspire Channel Swim, now in its ninth year, is the UK’s largest annual sponsored swimming event.

Researchers use nanoparticles to deliver treatment for brain, spinal cord injuries
Published 11/7/2008 | Treatments , November 2008 | Rating:
Purdue University researchers have developed a method of using nanoparticles to deliver treatments to injured brain and spinal cord cells.

A team led by Richard Borgens of the School of Veterinary Medicine's Center for Paralysis Research and Welden School of Biomedical Engineering coated silica nanoparticles with a polymer to target and repair injured guinea pig spinal cords. That research is being published in the October edition of the journal Small. 
Queen’s neuroscientist wins national award for spinal research
Published 11/7/2008 | Research , November 2008 | Unrated
Queen's University professor of Physiology Ken Rose has been selected as the 2008 recipient of the prestigious Barbara Turnbull Award for research in the area of spinal cord injury - an affliction that affects millions of Canadians.

The award is presented annually to the top-ranked spinal cord researcher in Canada, identified by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). It was initiated in 2001 by well-known Toronto journalist and research activist Barbara Turnbull, who, at the age of 18, was shot and paralyzed from the neck down during a convenience store robbery.

Nerves damaged by brain and spinal cord injuries regenerated in mice
Published 11/7/2008 | Research , November 2008 | Unrated
Nerves damaged by brain or spinal cord injury may be regenerated by silencing natural growth inhibitors, according to a new study.

Researchers at Children’’s Hospital Boston conducted an experiment on mice by temporarily silencing genes that prevent mature neurons from regenerating, and causing them to recover and re-grow vigorously after damage.
Paralyzed former drag racer Gwynn still passionate about racing, fishing
Published 11/7/2008 | November 2008 , Community Living | Unrated
Paralyzed champ stays busy running foundation, fishing tournaments

As a champion drag racer, Darrell Gwynn was unstoppable.

Despite a devastating accident during a 1990 test run that left him paralyzed and in a wheelchair, Gwynn hasn't slowed down.

A National Hot Rod Association world champion with 28 NHRA national event victories and a member of the International Drag Racing Hall of Fame, Gwynn also oversaw a successful race team.
Grandad's broken spine tragedy
Published 11/6/2008 | November 2008 , Law & Justice | Unrated

A GRANDAD died after six doctors at two hospitals failed to spot he had broken his spine.

Neville Caplan, 70, could have been saved if he’d had surgery in the three weeks before his death.

The retired pastry chef from Prestwich – described as ‘fit and healthy’  – fell while babysitting.

Hundreds of experts gather in Toronto to share cutting-edge advances in spinal cord rehabilitation
Published 11/6/2008 | Research , November 2008 | Unrated
Is it possible to control devices through thought alone? One researcher is determined to find the answer. César Marquez is presenting the results of a brain-machine interfacing (BMI) study and its implications for people living with limited mobility at a national spinal cord rehabilitation conference on Friday. BMI technology uses brain signals to control devices like computers and robotic arms. This means people living with physical disabilities would have the ability to control assistive devices through thought.

"The results of the BMI study suggest that it may be possible to use brain signals to control assistive devices for individuals with physical disabilities," states Marquez, a PhD student from the University of Toronto who is completing his degree at Toronto Rehabilitation Institute (Toronto Rehab) and leading the BMI study.
Two months after paralyzing spinal cord injury, Mason-Hale on the mend
Published 11/6/2008 | November 2008 , Athletics | Unrated
Chris Mason-Hale, who suffered a bruised spinal cord in a scrimmage while playing football for Western Tech in Catonsville, works with physical therapist Miranda Koser at Kernan Hospital. (Baltimore Sun photo by Elizabeth Malby / October 29, 2008)

Chris Mason-Hale vividly remembers the football play that changed his life. The scene rolls through his mind with the same detail as the action movies he watches on his portable DVD player at Kernan Hospital.
Lawsuit claims school board, others negligent
Published 11/5/2008 | November 2008 , Law & Justice | Rating:
Michael Box, was left with a snapped vertebrae and severed spinal cord from a wrestling accident. This photo shows him in the Hospital For Sick Children in Toronto in December 2007.

The family of an injured teen wrestler, now confined to a wheelchair, is seeking $65 million in damages.

The statement of claim filed by the Box family alleges negligence on behalf of the defendants. The claims have not been proven in court, but include allegations that Michael Box was moved after he sustained his injury during the wrestling match.

Creative physical therapy improves lives of people with paralysis
Published 11/4/2008 | November 2008 , Rehabilitation | Unrated

Every 41 minutes someone sustains a spinal cord injury. Almost half of these injuries are due to motor vehicle crashes, followed by the next most common cause, falls. The majority of those affected are males between the ages of 16 and 30. One minute they’re leading active, independent lives and the next, they’re paralyzed, confined to a wheelchair and destined to a sedentary existence.

Such was the fate of Allan Northrup. Seven years ago, the Eastside man was in a car accident off of I-90 on Thanksgiving weekend. He sustained a C7-T1 spinal cord injury and ended up with a metal plate in his back to realign his spine. He spent two months in rehab and eventually learned how to transfer himself from his bed to his wheelchair.

Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation Launches First-Ever National Advertising Campaign
Published 11/3/2008 | Research , November 2008 | Rating:

The Reeve Foundation debuts new national ad campaign giving consumers a look into the world of paralysis

The Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation has announced the launch of its first-ever national advertising campaign. The campaign presents an edgier side of the Reeve Foundation, by giving the public a perspective of what life is like through the eyes of someone living with paralysis. The provocative print and online ads were designed to evoke emotion by conveying the message that paralysis can happen to anyone at anytime without warning -- unlike many diseases, there are no screening or prevention methods for paralysis.
Ex-Kwantlen student launches paper while coping with spinal-cord injury
Published 10/30/2008 | September 2008 , Education | Rating:
Starting a student newspaper is a challenge under the best of circumstances. Doing this while partially paralyzed takes it to a whole new level.

These days, DJ Lam can often be found peering at a laptop computer while sitting in a wheelchair in his room at the G. F. Strong Rehabilitation Centre, where he has been since his transfer in August from Vancouver General Hospital’s spinal-cord unit. Lam squeezes in time between his rehab sessions to work on the Runner, a nascent student publication that will begin distribution in January on the four campuses of Kwantlen Polytechnic University.
Simple steps reduce spinal cord injury
Published 10/28/2008 | October 2008 , Prevention | Rating:
With fair weather and more tolerable temperatures, the arrival of fall months often draws people outdoors to enjoy a variety of activities. However, as people spend more time outdoors, their exposure to high-risk behavior increases.

This increase in high-risk behavior can often lead to higher rates of injury, especially potentially disabling or fatal spinal cord injuries. Fortunately, careful attention to surroundings and safety can often help people avoid these life-threatening accidents.
Researchers develop therapy to treat paralysis
Published 10/27/2008 | Treatments , October 2008 | Rating:
A team of researchers at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio are developing a new therapy that will help paralysis victims regain control of their muscles.

Functional Electrical Stimulation uses electric currents to stimulate muscles that no longer receive messages from the brain.

"When someone has a spinal cord injury, it's like they cut an electrical wire," Brian Heidenreich, associate professor of psychology, said. "The neurons that control muscles in the spinal cord are still there, but they don't get any messages from the brain."
Paralyzed vet finds freedom donning a wet suit
Published 10/26/2008 | October 2008 , Recreation | Rating:
Jim Hay knows a thing or two about adventure and he certainly isn't one to shy away from a challenge.

So he was more than ready to pull on a wet suit, strap on a tank, gear and goggles and head into the deep end of the pool during a scuba diving excursion at the Rio Rancho Aquatic Center.

"You are really flying underwater. It's an amazing feeling," said Hay, a Vietnam veteran from Albuquerque. "It wasn't really scary, it was more exciting. It is just relaxing, fun and it's totally awesome."
Leo Maxam, The Green Room: Disabled surfer will ride in Cold Water Classic today
Published 10/26/2008 | October 2008 , Athletics | Unrated
Inside the competitors' tent at the O'Neill Cold Water Classic you'll find a long rack of brightly colored and stickered-up surfboards, all stashed by pro surfers preparing to paddle out for their heats. One board in particular stands out. It's longer, wider and has handle bars mounted onto the front of the deck, designed specially for a surfer without the use of his legs.

The board belongs to Christiaan "Otter" Bailey, one of only two paralyzed professional surfers in the world. Lying prone, Bailey will ride his customized six-finned surfboard out at Steamer Lane today as part of the Life Rolls On Foundation expression session. 
New UAB lab helps spinal cord patients cope
Published 10/24/2008 | October 2008 , Adaptive Tech | Rating:
A new lab at UAB's Spain Rehabilitation Center offers spinal cord injury patients a look at how technology can help them overcome disabilities, particularly in using computers and other electronic equipment.

The Dr. Samuel L. Stover Assistive Technology Laboratory is being dedicated at 12:15 p.m. today at the Center for Psychiatric Medicine. The lab is named for a former chairman of the University of Alabama at Birmingham's department of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

"We want to empower patients with information," said Phil Klebine, project coordinator for the lab. 
'Never Ever Boy' from Quincy proving doctors wrong
Published 10/22/2008 | Health Promotion , October 2008 | Rating:
Quincy native Trevor Akers is called a "Never Ever Boy" at a physical therapy clinic in Fayetteville, Ga.

That's because after a motorcycle accident in July 2003 in Quincy, doctors told him he would "never ever" walk again because of the severity of his spinal cord injury.

But Akers "never ever" accepted that verdict.

"Don't let anybody break you down," he said. "A lot of people doubt. They say, 'That guy will never walk again.' That drives me to want to prove to those people that it is possible, and the harder you work for it, the more you'll get back." 
Nerve repair, biodetectors, proton therapy, microscopic medical devices
Published 10/20/2008 | Research , October 2008 | Rating:
Despite the success of organ transplantation surgery, many people in need of transplants die while on the waiting list because of the scarcity of donated organs. Artificial, lab-grown organs offer one potential solution to the problem. One novel engineering technique involves the use of modified thermal ink-jet printers to "print" cells, creating the complex three-dimensional structure of real tissues. A lingering question, however, is how well cells survive the process.

Bioengineering graduate student Xiaofeng Cui of Clemson University tested this with a comprehensive study of changes in heat shock protein expression and the morphology of cells after printing.
Botox Injections Bring Relief to Victims of Stroke, Spine, Brain Injury
Published 10/19/2008 | October 2008 , Medical Tech | Unrated
Best known for its use by individuals, celebrities and models to stave off “Father Time” and eliminate facial lines and wrinkles, the Botox injection is gaining increasing attention for its use in the treatment of a debilitating and painful condition known as spastic paralysis.

Also referred to as spasticity, spastic paralysis often occurs following a stroke, spinal cord injury, or brain injury. It is estimated that spasticity affects from 19 to 38 percent of stroke patients, often affecting the hands and wrists. Spastic paralysis results from the damage to the portion of the nervous system that controls and coordinates the movement of voluntary muscles (which are the muscles that allow us to walk, throw a ball, grip a pen, play the piano, sit in a chair, etc.)
Races help local spinal cord research
Published 10/17/2008 | Research Funding , October 2008 | Unrated

More than 200 people heard about work with adult stem cells to treat Parkinson’s disease and innovative physical therapy to restore function and feeling to paralyzed limbs at a kickoff dinner and fundraiser on Oct. 10, as part of the fifth annual Oceano Dunes Beach Race and Festival (see related story).

The festival is a three-day event to raise money for two area nonprofit foundations: SCI Research Advancement, a Santa Ynez Valley foundation dedicated to finding a cure for spinal cord injuries, and The Clayton Memorial Foundation in San Luis Obispo, which helps injured motorcycle riders.

Warnings about stem cell therapy tourism
Published 10/17/2008 | Stem Cells , October 2008 | Unrated
Australian scientists are worried about what they describe as a growing industry of stem cell tourism.

More and more people suffering spinal cord injuries, paralysis, cancer and other conditions are travelling to India and China for stem cell treatment.

One Indian Doctor who offers foreign patients embryonic stem cell therapy is speaking at a fundraising event in Melbourne tomorrow night.
Paraplegic turns trailblazer
Published 10/17/2008 | Travel , October 2008 | Unrated

It's 4.5 hard miles down the Bright Angel Trail to Indian Garden, not far above the floor of the Grand Canyon, and 4.5 even tougher miles back up to the top.

The trail is so challenging that it's generally been thought that no paralyzed person would ever make the breathtakingly beautiful but physically demanding trip.

Until now.

Wrist research might one day help the paralyzed
Published 10/16/2008 | Treatments , October 2008 | Unrated
Monkeys taught to play a computer game were able to overcome wrist paralysis with an experimental device that might lead to new treatments for patients with stroke and spinal cord injury.

Remarkably, the monkeys regained use of paralyzed muscles by learning to control the activity of just a single brain cell.

The result is “an important step forward,” said Dawn Taylor of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, who studies the concept of using brain signals to overcome paralysis. She wasn't involved in the new work.

Stem cell research expands as more applications are tested
Published 10/16/2008 | Stem Cells , October 2008 | Unrated

It's been almost 20 years since Dr. Sam Weiss, professor and researcher at the University of Calgary, made the stunning confirmation of the existence of stem cells tucked between the jelly-like bumps of adult brain matter.

Since then, the world has taken the concept of "patient heal thyself" to a whole new level with a new field of health care dubbed "regenerative medicine."

Weiss, who is now head of the Hotchkiss Brain Institute at U of C, says back then, he had no clue how his team's finding would impact the world.

Water slide enthusiasts be warned
Published 10/16/2008 | October 2008 , Prevention | Unrated

A head-first trip down a water slide might sound exciting but it can cause serious spinal cord injuries, Turkish researchers warn.

In a report in the Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine, Doga Gurkanlar, of Baskent University in Ankara, and his team described neck injuries suffered by four men who were injured on water slides.

Each man had taken a head-first dive down the slide, which in a normal water park consists of a long trough or tube with flowing water that ends in a relatively shallow splashdown pool.

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