Research Links

Our staff has deemed the following public research links as significant and/or new findings by the global research community in the search for a cure for paralysis.  You can search the database by category, keyword, name, and/or date.  Keep abreast of cure research breakthroughs by signing up for our research newsletter. 

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Please note that the research posted here is not affiliated with the MCPF unless that is specifically stated.

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APOV: Another spinal injury victim walks out of the hospital

By Ricky Palermo The Daily News Online | 0 comments

People in our community who have supported spinal injury research should feel proud knowing that their hard-earned donations really are working! This brief story is similar to what happened to Kevin Everett of the Buffalo Bills, except this time no rehabilitation...

posted @ Tuesday, May 03, 2011 11:27 AM by pmorton

BioTime And XenneX Form LifeMap Sciences, Inc. To Create Roadmap For Regenerative Medicine

BioTime, Inc. (NYSE Amex: BTX), a biotechnology company that develops and markets products in the field of stem cells and regenerative medicine, today announced it has formed LifeMap Sciences, Inc., in collaboration with XenneX, Inc. LifeMap Sciences will develop and commercialize a database of the thousands of cell lineages branching from embryonic stem cells, and their molecular markers. LifeMap Sciences...

posted @ Tuesday, May 03, 2011 11:24 AM by pmorton

First patient to get stem cell therapy comes forward

By Rob Stein, Published: April 6

In the six months since scientists announced they had infused a drug made from human embryonic stem cells into a partially paralyzed patient’s spine, the identity of the recipient has been shrouded in secrecy.

Recently, rumors began circulating in Internet chat rooms that details about the closely guarded...

posted @ Tuesday, May 03, 2011 11:19 AM by pmorton

Finding a Cure for Spinal Cord Injury with On-Demand LIMS

The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis finds an on-demand laboratory information management system (LIMS) helps to accelerate discovery in its HCS projects.

Traumatic injury to the central nervous system (CNS) usually results in irreversible loss of function. Consequently, individuals with injured spinal cords can be permanently paralyzed. This function loss occurs...

posted @ Friday, November 12, 2010 4:40 PM by pmorton

Injured Rutgers player Eric LeGrand may benefit from new advances in spinal cord research

October 21, 2010

As doctors continued treating Rutgers football player Eric LeGrand for the spinal cord injury suffered in Saturday’s football game, there was no word Wednesday from either the school or the hospital as to his condition or prospects for recovery.

But as uncertain as the immediate future may be for LeGrand,...

posted @ Friday, November 12, 2010 4:37 PM by pmorton

Bionic legs enable paraplegics to walk

About the eLegs prototype:

A paraplegic for 18 years, Amanda Boxtel stands from her wheelchair and takes a few tentative steps. She beams as the bionic skeleton she is wearing helps propel her legs forward.“To take my first step … was just astounding … and then I took another step and another one,” she exclaims afterwards...

posted @ Friday, November 12, 2010 4:34 PM by pmorton

Neuralstem Updates ALS Clinical Trial Progress

PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Neuralstem, Inc. (NYSE Amex: CUR) updated the progress of its ongoing Phase I human clinical trial of the company's spinal cord stem cells in the treatment of ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease) at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. The company announced that, after reviewing the safety data from the first six non-ambulatory patients, the trial's Safety Monitoring Board has unanimously approved moving to the next

posted @ Friday, November 12, 2010 4:29 PM by pmorton

Embryonic Stem Cell Test on Spinal Cord Injury

ATLANTA, Oct. 12, 2010

Embryonic Stem Cell Test on Spinal Cord Injury

First U.S. Study of Stem Cell Drug on Human Paraplegic; Testing Will Help Determine (CBS/AP)  For the first time ever in the U.S., a patient with a spinal cord injury has been injected with human embryonic stem cells.

The hope: that one day this treatment may help the paralyzed walk again.

On Friday at the Shepherd Center, a spinal cord and brain injury rehabilitation..

posted @ Wednesday, October 13, 2010 2:42 PM by pmorton

Lawmakers Craft Legislation to Protect Stem Cell Research

Ana Radelat from Washington, DC
CNC News | September 29, 2010
Share Ask a question Comment WASHINGTON -- Yesterday's US Court of Appeal's ruling that overturned a lower court injunction against the federal funding of stem cell research is only the latest round of a protracted political battle over that cutting-edge science.

Continuing lawsuit
And even as hundreds of university and private medical research facilities resume their federally-funded stem cell work, a continuing lawsuit..

posted @ Wednesday, October 13, 2010 2:26 PM by pmorton

Founder of start-up says device will one day change treatment of spinal cord injuries

By Scott Kirsner
Globe Correspondent / September 26, 2010 

 While most people who suffer a traumatic spinal cord injury never recover their normal functioning, Reynolds has written that his company’s medical device will “restore 80 percent of the patient’s normal functioning.’’ In the company’s early experiments with paralyzed primates, Reynolds has said, “100 percent of our monkeys have gotten up and walked in just about three weeks.’’

He told a Boston audience recently that he hopes to begin a small human trial of the device, which is implanted in the spinal ..

posted @ Wednesday, October 13, 2010 2:21 PM by pmorton

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