This looks promising:
Paralyzed people are beginning to walk with a new kind of therapy
By Carolyn Y. Johnson
September 24 at 11:00 AM
...
Thomas, now 23, is one of several people with spinal cord injuries who are standing, taking steps and — in her case — walking without assistance, thanks to an experimental combination therapy. In a research study at the University of Louisville, Thomas and three others had a device surgically implanted on their spinal cords to stimulate electrical activity, accompanied by months of daily physical therapy. In the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers from the University of Louisville reported that two of the subjects could stand and take limited steps at the end of the study, and two were able to walk independently — Thomas and another patient, Jeff Marquis. The research was supported by a charitable foundation, the University of Louisville Hospital and device maker Medtronic.
A simultaneous case report published in Nature Medicine reported that a single patient with a spinal cord injury at the Mayo Clinic was also able to take steps and walk with trainer assistance with electrical stimulation and intensive physical therapy.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/heal...with-new-kind-therapy/?utm_term=.f97119df0750
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...1b7af255aa5_story.html?utm_term=.8db1b9d9acc3
Paralyzed people are beginning to walk with a new kind of therapy
By Carolyn Y. Johnson
September 24 at 11:00 AM
...
Thomas, now 23, is one of several people with spinal cord injuries who are standing, taking steps and — in her case — walking without assistance, thanks to an experimental combination therapy. In a research study at the University of Louisville, Thomas and three others had a device surgically implanted on their spinal cords to stimulate electrical activity, accompanied by months of daily physical therapy. In the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers from the University of Louisville reported that two of the subjects could stand and take limited steps at the end of the study, and two were able to walk independently — Thomas and another patient, Jeff Marquis. The research was supported by a charitable foundation, the University of Louisville Hospital and device maker Medtronic.
A simultaneous case report published in Nature Medicine reported that a single patient with a spinal cord injury at the Mayo Clinic was also able to take steps and walk with trainer assistance with electrical stimulation and intensive physical therapy.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/heal...with-new-kind-therapy/?utm_term=.f97119df0750
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...1b7af255aa5_story.html?utm_term=.8db1b9d9acc3