article imageScientists Restore Nerve Sensation in Amputees

By David Silverberg.
Subscribe to author
Nov 28, 2007 by  David Silverberg - 18 votes, 4 comments
Share
Listen - Email - Print
Recipient email:
You can enter up to 10 comma-separated email addresses.
Your email:
optional
Message:
optional
1 more article on this subject:

Digital Journal — Amputees may soon be able to regain the sense of touch and temperature in their “phantom” limbs, a new innovative surgery promises. In the future, artificial limbs may not be so different from regular limbs in terms of sensation.
A new type of surgery rerouted major nerves to give amputees better control over their prosthetic arms. This connection sparks nerve growth into the skin of the chest, allowing the amputee to feel the sense of touch and temperature.
When certain areas of the chest are touched, the amputee feels something in the missing hand.
Paul Marasco, a sensory neurophysiologist and post-doctoral fellow at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, told CBC News: "It appears that the body has a really surprising ability to heal itself, and the idea that these nerves were able to regenerate through the skin over such large distances did come as quite a surprise to us."
Marasco added that his innovative surgery isn’t invasive or complex. Surgeons take the ends of several large nerves that remain after amputating the arm (nerves which previously controlled limb movement) and hook them up to the nerve under the pectoral muscle in the chest.
Marasco said: "We take each of those individual big nerves and then we plug right onto the little nerve that we cut on the underside of the muscle. And once that's done, then the motor parts, or the motor nerves, grow into muscle and re-establish connections with the muscle in the chest instead of the muscles they once served in the arm."
After several months, when the nerves reestablished themselves, researchers applied to the nerves physical pressure, warm and cold temperatures, and electrical stimulus. The patients say they could feel the sensation in their missing arms and hands.
The participating scientists said in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, according to France24: "This work offers the possibility that an amputee may one day be able to feel with an artificial limb as though it was his own."
article:246666:18::0

Live like a rodent at the French 'hamster hotel'

If you've ever had the urge to spend a night or two as a hamster, you need to visit Nantes, France. For around $150 a night, you can do everything a hamster does, from spinning on a wheel to eating the animal's food to sleeping on a pile of hay.
Nov 21, 2009 by  David Silverberg in Travel - 2 comments

Easyjet apologizes for Holocaust Memorial photo shoot

Easyjet is a European regional carrier that has quickly carved out market share with discount prices and targeted marketing. However, a recent public relations faux pas is causing controversy.
Nov 21, 2009 by  Bob Gordon in Travel - 6 comments

Chicago Mayor Says Media 'Kicked' Oprah Out of Town

Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley weighed in on the story that every Chicagoan has an opinion about, Oprah's departure happening eighteen months from now. Yesterday, Mayor Daley placed the burden of shame on the fifth estate.
Nov 21, 2009 by  Bob Gordon in Entertainment - 4 comments

TopFinds: Child Poverty in U.S., Creating Toothpick Cities

Investigating U.S. child poverty rates. A British TV station hires facially disfigured anchors to read the news. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 becomes the hottest video game of the year. These are the top stories making headlines around the world.
Nov 20, 2009 by  David Silverberg in Internet - 2 comments

Canada: No more H1N1 deaths than from seasonal flu

While headlines decry the rising H1N1 death toll, news is emerging that there have been no more deaths from this pandemic than from seasonal flu.
Nov 20, 2009 by  Lynne Melcombe in Health - 8 comments
apis-129892 apis-129889 apis-129886 apis-129867 apis-129865
Email:
Password:
Remember meForgot password?