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-   -   Research offers hope for severely brain-damaged (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=14964)

Chewbaccus 08-02-2007 04:41 PM

Research offers hope for severely brain-damaged
 
From Reuters:

Quote:

CHICAGO (Reuters) - A man with severe brain injuries who spent six years in a near-vegetative state can now chew his food, watch a movie and talk with family thanks to a brain pacemaker that may change the way such patients are treated, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday.

The 38-year-old man is the first person in a minimally conscious state to be treated with deep-brain stimulation, a treatment that uses a pacemaker and two electrodes to send impulses into a part of the brain regulating consciousness.

--snip--

"[The patient's] skull was completely crushed and he was left for dead [in a 1999 mugging]," his mother told reporters in a telephone briefing.

He spent the next five years in a nursing home with no hope of recovery. He would occasionally mouth the word yes or no, but could not communicate reliably or eat on his own.

His parents agreed to try the experimental treatment in August 2005, and doctors saw immediate results.

He was alert and could move his head to follow voices.

He can now drink from a cup, recall and speak 16 words, and watch a movie.

Rezai said he is engaged with his family, playing cards with his mother and taking short trips outside the facility.
Other reports I've seen describe the treatment as a sort of "pacemaker" - twin electrodes are inserted into the thalamus, which then emit electric pulses into the brain. The medical journals are quick to point out that this treatment worked on someone like the patient in question and not someone like Terri Schaivo because the patient was in a "near-vegetative" state. He could still respond to noises and make minor eye and thumb motions, though he could not speak. Still, appears to be a lot of potential, I'd think.

Undertoad 08-02-2007 05:04 PM

http://cellar.org/2007/limbaugh.jpg

Finally, a sign of hope.

xoxoxoBruce 08-02-2007 06:31 PM

I put a 9volt battery to my tongue... it didn't help.

My former MD retired because of Parkinson's. U of PA did an experimental procedure where they put two electrodes deep in his brain trying to establish new pathways, with limited success.

freshnesschronic 08-04-2007 09:35 PM

That's really amazing. Just like the movies.

wolf 08-04-2007 11:20 PM

Yeah, but the result in The Terminal Man wasn't what I'd call good or encouraging.

fargon 08-05-2007 04:41 PM

1 Attachment(s)
This Man need all the help he can get.

xoxoxoBruce 08-05-2007 06:32 PM

1 Attachment(s)
A sign of hope 2.

LabRat 08-14-2007 02:09 PM

The 90's have been deemed the "Decade of the Brain" because so much was discovered by so many. We should start to see lots of cool things like this coming down the pipe in the future.

Thank a lab animal today. :D

SteveDallas 08-15-2007 03:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LabRat (Post 374675)
The 90's have been deemed the "Decade of the Brain" because so much was discovered by so many.

Do you know of any good books on the subject, for a scientifically literate but non-expert audience?

LabRat 08-15-2007 04:24 PM

Crap, I just read one. It was by Scientific American...I'll try to remember to look it up tomorrow when I have more time, and post.

xoxoxoBruce 08-15-2007 06:09 PM

10 unsolved mysteries of the brain.

LabRat 08-16-2007 12:50 PM

Best of the Brain from Scientific American

Good article Bruce.

FWIW the research I am currently involved in is trying to decipher the role of specific molecules in the development and maintenance of synapses, as well as the role of migroglia in brain repair after injury.


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