New spinal cord implant helps completely paralysed patients stand and walk again
BBC - 07-Feb-2022This early-phase technology could be game changer for spinal injuries very soon
Join the club for FREE to access the whole archive and other member benefits.
IRP chair in Spinal Cord Repair - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL).
Grégoire Courtine was originally trained in Mathematics and Physics, but received his PhD degree in Experimental Medicine from the University of Pavia, Italy, and the INSERM Plasticity and Motricity, in France, in 2003. From 2004-2007, he held a Post-doctoral Fellow position at the Brain Research Institute, University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) under the supervision of Dr. Reggie Edgerton, and was a research associate for the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation (CDRF). In 2008, he became Assistant Professor at the faculty of Medicine of the University of Zurich where he established his own research laboratory. In 2012, he was nominated Associate Professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) where he holds the International paraplegic foundation (IRP) chair in spinal cord repair at the Center for Neuroprosthetics and the Brain Mind Institute. He published several articles proposing radically new approaches for restoring function after spinal cord injury, which were discussed in national and international press extensively. He received numerous honors and awards such as the 2007 UCLA Chancellors award for excellence in post-doctoral research and the 2009 Schellenberg Prize for his innovative research in spinal cord injury awarded by the International Foundation of Research in Paraplegia.
Visit website: https://people.epfl.ch/gregoire.courtine/?lang=en
gr%C3%A9goire-courtine-81786b45
See also: Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) - University that specializes in natural sciences and engineering
Details last updated 19-Dec-2019
This early-phase technology could be game changer for spinal injuries very soon
An implant that beams instructions out of the brain, restores movement in paralysed primates