The “game-changing technology” could help restore movement in people with advanced forms of the disease according to Parkinson’s researchers.
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00:00 [ Music ]
00:20 My role was to implant electrodes
00:23 over the spinal cord responsible for locomotion.
00:27 So those are the last six centimeters of the spinal cord
00:30 and I applied electrodes on the top of the spinal cord
00:34 that are linked to a neurostimulator located
00:37 under the skin in the region of the abdomen.
00:39 We start programming the stimulator in order
00:44 to apply this electrical stimulation
00:46 to the spinal cord of Mark and he starts walking better.
00:51 [ Music ]
01:03 So we've got 153,000 people affected by Parkinson's
01:07 in the UK now and about 12 million globally.
01:11 So unfortunately, as people progress
01:15 down their Parkinson's journey, you know,
01:18 the medications stop working.
01:20 So with that individual that underwent the implantation,
01:24 he was having freezing, having regular falls
01:29 and that is really quite a common occurrence in somebody
01:32 with advanced Parkinson's.
01:34 So you are dealing with a significant number
01:36 that would potentially benefit from this.
01:38 [ Music ]