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Spinal cord injury leads to a range of disabilities, including limitations in locomotor activity, that seriously diminish the patients’ autonomy and quality of life. Electrochemical neuromodulation therapies, robot-assisted rehabilitation and willpower-based training paradigms restored supraspinal control of locomotion in rodent models of severe spinal cord injury. This treatment promoted extensive and ubiquitous remodeling of spared circuits and residual neural pathways. In four chronic paraplegic individuals, electrical neuromodulation of the spinal cord resulted in the immediate recovery of voluntary leg movements, suggesting that the therapeutic concepts developed in rodent models may also apply to humans. Here, we briefly review previous work, summarize current developments, and highlight impediments to translate these interventions into medical practice to improve functional recovery of spinal-cord-injured individuals
Grégoire Courtine, Jordan Squair, Markus Maximilian Rieger
Grégoire Courtine, Jocelyne Bloch, Léonie Asboth, Robin Jonathan Demesmaeker, Anne Marie Lucienne Watrin, Sergio Daniel Hernandez, Henri Charles Alexandre Lorach, Jimmy James Ravier, Grégory Didier Dumont, Félix Antoine Martel, Laure Coquoz, Valeria Spagnolo, Thibault Jean Etienne Collin, Icare Sakr, Lucas Struber, Salif Axel Komi, Molywan Vat, Carmina Andrea Galvez Solano, Guillaume Vincent Charvet, Edeny Baaklini, Cathal John Harte, Olivier Pierre Nicolas Faivre, Serpil Karakas