Researchers at EPFL and Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV), led by professors Gregoire Courtine and Jocelyne Bloch, have made significant advances in the treatment of spinal cord injuries (SCI). The scientists boosted the recovery of lower limb movements in two people with partial SCI by delivering deep brain stimulation (DBS) to an unanticipated region of the brain--the lateral hypothalamus (LH), considerably increasing their autonomy and well-being. Also read | Covid-19 infection can cause vocal cord paralysis in teenagers, finds new study
Wolfgang Jager, a 54-year-old from Kappel, Austria,
has been in a wheelchair since 2006 after a ski accident left him with a spinal
cord injury. Participating in the clinical trial, he experienced firsthand how
deep brain stimulation could restore his mobility and independence. "Last
year on vacation, it was no problem to walk a couple of steps down and back to
the sea using the stimulation," Jager shared, describing the newfound
freedom DBS has given him. Beyond walking, the therapy has improved everyday
tasks. "I can also reach things in my cupboards in the kitchen," he
added.
DBS is a well-established neurosurgical technique that
involves implanting electrodes into specific brain regions to modulate neural
activity. Traditionally, DBS has been used to treat movement disorders like
Parkinson's disease and essential tremor by targeting areas of the brain
responsible for motor control. However, applying DBS to the lateral
hypothalamus to treat partial paralysis is a novel approach. By focusing on the
LH, the researchers at . Neurorestore tapped into an unexpected neural pathway
that had not been considered before for motor recovery.
Findings of
the study:
In the study published in Nature Medicine, not only
did the DBS show immediate results to augment walking during rehabilitation,
but patients also showed long-term improvement that persisted even when the
stimulation was turned off. These findings suggest that the treatment promoted
a reorganization of residual nerve fibers that contribute to sustained
neurological improvements. Also read | Sleep paralysis: Awake, but can't move
your body? Expert on this scary sleep disorder
"This research demonstrates that the brain is
needed to recover from paralysis. Surprisingly, the brain is not able to take
full advantage of the neuronal projections that survive after a spinal cord injury.
Here, we found how to tap into a small region of the brain that was not known
to be involved in the production of walking in order to engage these residual
connections and augment neurological recovery in people with spinal cord
injury," says Courtine, professor of neuroscience at EPFL, Lausanne
University Hospital (CHUV) and UNIL and co-director of the .
The success of this DBS therapy hinged on two
complementary approaches: discoveries enabled by novel methodologies in animal
studies and the translation of these discoveries into precise surgical
techniques in humans. For the surgery, the researchers used detailed brain
scans to guide the precise locations of the small electrodes into the brain,
performed by Bloch at CHUV, while the patient was fully awake.
"Once the electrode was in place and we performed
the stimulation, the first patient immediately said, 'I feel my legs.' When we
increased the stimulation, she said, 'I feel the urge to walk!' This real-time
feedback confirmed we had targeted the correct region, even if this region had
never been associated with the control of the legs in humans. At this moment, I
knew that we were witnessing an important discovery for the anatomical
organization of brain functions," says Bloch, neurosurgeon and professor
at the Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV), UNIL and EPFL, and co-director of
the.
The identification of the LH as a key player in motor
recovery after paralysis is in itself an important scientific discovery, given
that this region has traditionally only been associated with functions like
arousal and feeding. This breakthrough emerged from the development of a novel
multi-step methodology that began with whole-brain anatomical and functional
mapping to establish the role of this region in walking, followed by
experiments in preclinical models to establish the precise circuits involved in
the recovery. Ultimately, these results led to clinical trials in human
participants.
"It was fundamental research, through the
creation of detailed brain-wide maps, that allowed us to identify the lateral
hypothalamus in the recovery of walking. Without this foundational work, we
would not have uncovered the unexpected role this region plays in walking
recovery," says Jordan Squair, a lead author of the study.
The advanced imaging platform at the Wyss Center
played a critical role in this research by providing high-resolution imaging
capabilities that enabled the team to map the anatomical and functional
activity of neurons across the brain, enabling the identification of the
lateral hypothalamus.
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