This is a news release from the University of Utah
"Areas of the brain that control
walking and other movements continue to work
normally in patients paralyzed by spinal cord
injuries, according to a University of Utah study in
the Oct. 25 issue of the journal Nature.
The discovery represents an early step toward a
long-term goal of implanting electrodes that would
bypass damaged nerves and make it possible for
paralyzed people to move and perhaps even walk
again.
"This study suggests that many years from now,
technologies being developed in the laboratory today
might enable paralyzed individuals to stand up out of
a wheelchair and walk," said Richard Normann, a
professor of bioengineering and ophthalmology at
the University of Utah.
Already, he noted, "a number of researchers are
trying to develop brain-computer interfaces that can
be used to control external devices - robotic arms,
wheelchairs, computer terminals - using signals
originating within a paralyzed person's brain."
Normal command signals from a paralyzed person's
brain could be used initially "to control devices,"
Normann said. "But eventually these same signals
perhaps could be used to directly control the
muscles of a paraplegic person, ultimately allowing
them to move their body just through the desire to
do so. … That's really long way away. This is not a
problem I'm going to solve, but maybe my students
will solve it."
A crucial first step is to show the brain's motor
cortex does not degenerate significantly - and still
can send command signals - in people paralyzed by
a spinal injury.
That's exactly what Normann and colleagues did in
the new study, which showed that appropriate areas
of the brain "lit up" under functional magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) when five paralyzed
patients were asked to move their extremities.
"They were asked to move their hands, purse their
lips, move their ankles, rotate their elbows and extend their knees," Normann said.
All could purse their lips, because the head is above the injured part of the spine. Four of the five
were quadriplegics - also known as tetraplegics - and could not move the other body parts when
requested. The fifth had some ability to move his hands.
In each patient, MRI scans showed increased electrical activity in the corresponding part of the
brain when the patient was asked to move a hand, elbow ankle or knee.
Five uninjured student volunteers also had their brains imaged by MRI while they were told to
perform the same movements. That confirmed previous research showing which parts of the
brain's motor cortex control movements of various body parts.
The study, published in the Oct. 25 issue of the journal Nature, was conducted under Normann's
supervision by Shy Shoham, a former Utah bioengineering graduate student now doing
postdoctoral research at Princeton University. Others who conducted the study were Utah
bioengineer Edwin Maynard and Eric Halgren, a former Utah brain-imaging specialist now at
Massachusetts General Hospital.
The patients in the study were young adults, mean age 28, paralyzed in motor vehicle crashes
one to five years before the study. All had been patients at the University of Utah's University
Hospital, and volunteered for the study after being asked to participate.
"They have an altruistic view of helping other people with the same problem," Normann said.
He said researchers had feared paralyzed people's brains might not retain the ability to send
signals to muscles. That is because when portions of the brain are not used, they often undergo a
certain amount of "reorganization" where other parts of the brain take over the computing power for
other purposes. The new study showed such fears were unwarranted, at least up to five years after
a paralyzing spinal injury.
The next step is to conduct lab experiments showing an electrode can be implanted to read brain
signals on a long-term basis without harming the brain or implant, Normann said.
After such an initial safety demonstration, implants would require testing in human volunteers,
perhaps brain-tumor patients who are undergoing brain surgery anyway, he added. Later, the
devices would be tested in paraplegics and quadriplegics. Such experiments would determine if
the electrodes could receive command signals from the brain's motor cortex.
In an even later stage, electrodes would be implanted just outside the spinal cord. Those
electrodes would receive the command signals from the electrodes in the brain - via either wires or
radio signals - and relay those signals to the appropriate muscles.
In previously published research, Normann and colleagues demonstrated that small electrodes
implanted in the sciatic nerves of anesthetized laboratory animals receive external command
signals and can be used to precisely control movements of the animals' ankles.
To restore movement to paralyzed people, it will not be enough to bypass the damaged spinal
cord by sending brain signals through electrodes to the muscles, Normann said.
The brain also must be able to receive sensory feedback from those muscles, for example, so the
brain "knows" the legs' physical location and can exert fine control as the legs move. So in
addition to electrodes in the motor cortex and outside the spinal cord, other electrodes would have
to be implanted in the sensory cortex and outside the spinal cord to carry sensory information
from muscles back to the brain.
Normann noted research aimed at restoring movement in paralyzed people is advancing on two
fronts. One is the "engineered" approach he is taking, aimed at brain-computer interfaces that
would let paralyzed people control devices and eventually their own muscles. Other researchers,
however, are looking for biological solutions in which gene therapy or stem cells might be used to
regenerate damaged spinal tissue, he said.
Normann is well known for his research aimed at developing a scoreboard-like artificial vision
system to help profoundly blind people regain some ability to see. Such a system would use a
tiny eyeglass-mounted camera to collect visual information, and then relay it to electrodes in the
brain's visual cortex. So far, such electrodes have been implanted in four people to make sure
there are no adverse reactions, but Normann has not yet used the electrodes to produce artificial
vision.
The Utah researcher also is working on an artificial hearing system to transmit nerve impulses
from sounds to stimulate the auditory nerves of people with impaired hearing."