Oct 9th, 2008 · An Australian airline Qantas Airbus A330-300, suffered 'a sudden change of altitude' on Tuesday. "The mid-air incident resulted in injuries to 74 people, with 51 of them treated by three hospitals in Perth for fractures, lacerations and suspected spinal …
see also: electronics · instruments · Navigation · altitude · passenger · Australian · Bluetooth
Oct 9th, 2008 · An Australian airline Qantas Airbus A330-300, suffered "a sudden change of altitude" on Tuesday. "The mid-air incident resulted in injuries to 74 people, with 51 of them treated by three hospitals in Perth for fractures, lacerations and suspected spinal …
see also: electronics · instruments · Navigation · altitude · passenger · Australian · Bluetooth
Jan 9th, 2008 · Spinal cord damage blocks the routes that the brain uses to send messages to the nerve cells that control walking. Until now, doctors believed that the only way for injured patients to walk again was to re-grow the long nerve highways that link the brain …
see also: scientists · cellular · research · Cell · patient · movement · UCLA
Sep 7th, 2007 · New Scientist reports on another development in interfacing with the central nervous system. The system "eavesdrops" on signals sent from the brain to the larynx, so even people who lack the muscular control to vocalize a command can operate it. The potential …
see also: computer · scientists · technology · speech · interface · Humans · eavesdropping
Sep 6th, 2007 · The Toronto Star reports researchers have used adult skin stem cells to heal spinal cord injuries in rats. "Injured rats injected with skin-derived stem cells regained mobility and had better walking co-ordination, according to the study published yesterday …
see also: Cell · survive · adult · spine · mobility · Spinal · Injuries
Jul 14th, 2007 · In 2004, the FDA approved the cone snail venom ziconotide (Prialt) for the treatment of chronic pain. It is only used for severe cases because it must be injected directly into the spinal column. This month, researchers from the University of Utah have …
see also: medical · 2004 · column · Discovery · amino · acids · FDA
Apr 25th, 2007 · Maximum Prophet noted that one of the most influential and loud rock bands in the history of music is coming back together to perform at Live Earth this summer. Yes, that's right Tap is Back. The article has some good news (a new single is coming) and …
see also: Music · history · Internet · recovery · Spinal · Reunited · Maximum Prophet
Jul 19th, 2006 · Malthooslie writes to tell us ScienceDaily is reporting that scientists have managed to regrow nerve fibers after a spinal injury. Using an enzyme called sialidase, isolated from bacteria, researchers were able to stimulate nerve fiber growth in rats. …
see also: scientists · Cell · Enzyme · patient · Surround · bacteria · fibers
Jun 22nd, 2006 · According to an article on Forbes as well as other sources, 'Scientists have used [embryonic] stem cells and a soup of nerve-friendly chemicals to not just bridge a damaged spinal cord but actually regrow the circuitry needed to move a muscle, helping …
see also: scientists · Cell · chemicals · circuitry · embryonic · Forbes · Spinal
Jun 17th, 2006 · California-based Geron has announced that the first embryonic stem cell trial may be in the not-so-distant future. Tom Okarma, Geron's CEO, recently announced that the company will be seeking permission from the FDA to begin clinical trials. From the …
see also: distant · company · Cell · CEO · Humans · neurons · transmitting
Nov 30th, 2005 · The Guardian has an article on how nose cells may cure spinal injuries. This technique has worked with rats, restoring feeling and movement to limbs damaged by severed nerves. The initial trial will be on people who have lost control of an arm due to …
see also: Cell · movement · Rats · trials · Guardian · Severs · Spinal
Oct 14th, 2005 · Dr. Elvin predicted the substance would lead to everything from artificial arteries to spinal parts that would not wear out despite being flexed 100 million times. 'That's how many times you move your back in 50 or 60 years,' he said. It could also be …
see also: Science · electronics · Artificial · shoes · Spinal · flexes · Insect
Sep 28th, 2005 · According to WorldNetDaily scientists in Korea report using umbilical cord blood stem cells to restore feeling and mobility to a spinal-cord injury patient. The research, published in the peer-reviewed journal Cytotherapy, centered on a woman who had …
see also: Korea · scientists · research · Cell · patient · Reviewers · accident
Jul 30th, 2005 · New research shows that rats that had their spinal columns severed were able to regain use of their hind legs through the use of stem cells from embryonic rats.
see also: research · Cell · column · Rats · embryonic · Severs · Spinal
May 20th, 2005 · Wired News reports that South Korean scientists have made a dramatic breakthrough by deriving stem cells from cloned embryos of patients with spinal cord injuries. It shouldn't be long before we can expect have a set of replacement parts ready when our …
see also: scientists · Cell · patient · Humans · cloning · Replacements · breakthrough