StemCellsChina.com

Fill out my online form.
Le Sueur Man Rehabs After Stem Cell Surgery Drucken E-Mail
International News
Sonntag, 26. November 2006 um 08:00 Uhr
There are no translations available.


Source: The Free Press

By Tim Krohn

'A lot going on' in his body

Brent Doebbeling aches. His muscles and body spasm uncontrollably. He hurts.

Which is all good news.

Doebbeling, the 27-year-old Le Sueur resident who had stem cell spinal surgery in Portugal this fall, is living in Rockford, Mich., with his girlfriend, Amy Bigaouette, where he is undergoing intensive physical therapy.

Doebbeling, who broke his neck diving in a pool six years ago, is paralyzed from the neck down. He underwent a surgery, which isn’t yet available in America, in which doctors took stem cells from deep inside his nose and implanted them along the damaged area of his spine. The hope is the cells create new nerve cells and blood vessels that restore some of the electrical signals from the brain to the muscles.

He was the first Minnesotan to get the surgery.

“I haven’t noticed any major muscles coming back or anything,” said Doebbeling, who began therapy two months ago. “But I can tell there’s a lot going on in my body. The muscles and the spasms.

“There’s stuff going on. I don’t know what it is, but something’s going on, which is good.”

The couple, who have their house in Le Sueur for sale, moved to Michigan because it has a rehab center that specializes in therapy for those who’ve undergone the cell surgery in other countries.

Bigaouette said they had planned to rent an apartment or house for the two years they hope to be there, but could find no wheelchair-accessible rentals. They bought an accessible home about four miles from the Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan’s Center for Spinal Cord Injury Recovery.

“Brent is doing good. He really likes the therapy and you can tell things are changing in his body,” Bigaouette said.

The couple isn’t expecting miracles. While some quadriplegics who’ve had the surgery have regained use of their arms or legs and are even walking with a walker, Doebbeling said he would be thrilled to just gain some use of an arm to increase his independence.

“We’ve been talking to a lot of people who’ve had the surgery and they say if you see a difference, you’ll start noticing it from three months to a year after the surgery,” Bigaouette said.

Doebbeling said his therapy is varied and he is assisted by one to four people who lift him and help push his body through routines.

His wrists are strapped to a weight-lifting machine and the therapists assist him in pulling the weights to strengthen his wrist and arm muscles. He spends time in the pool where the buoyancy makes it easier for therapists to move and strengthen his limbs. He’s laid on his back and his feet and hands are attached to a bicycle-like machine that rotates his arms and legs.

“The machine is set so my legs and arms are moving at different speeds. It’s designed to upset your normal nervous system to stimulate it,” Doebbeling said.

 

Suche

Patienten Berichte

ALS - Mr. Reynolds
ALS - Ms. Brooks
Ataxie - Hr. Arruda
Ataxia - Mr. Blair
Ataxia - Ms. Crowter
Ataxia - Ms. Graf
Ataxia - Ms. Gray
Ataxie - Fr. Jones
Ataxia - Mr. K. Graf
Ataxia - Mr. Knoblauch
Ataxia - Mr. Martin
Ataxia - Mr. Nate
Ataxie - Hr. P. Flynn
Ataxie - Hr. R. Flynn
Ataxia - Mr. T. Graf
Ataxie - Hr. Wallace
Autism - Mr. Lachlan
Autismus - Fr. Maria
Autismus - Hr. Pacis
Autismus - Hr. Wang
Autismus - Hr. Yu
Batten Disease - Mr. Dell'Aringa
Brain Injury - Mr. Anduha
Gehirnverletzungen - Hr. Ashton
Brain Injury - Mr. Blazevic
Brain Injury - Mr. Cui
Gehirnverletzungen - Hr. Hayward
Brain Injury - Ms. McAfee
Gehirnverletzungen - Hr. Nguyen
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Andrew Ricci
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Bocskai
Cerebralparese - Hr. Boles
Cerebral Palsy - Ms. Caprioru
Cerebralparese - Fr. Ella
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Gryphon
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Lawrence
Cerebralparese - Hr. Nicholas
Cerebral Palsy - Ms. Sosa
Cerebralparese - Hr. Teskey
Cerebral Palsy - Ms. Tahiliani
Cerebralparese - Hr. Phang
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Will
Epilepsie - Fr. Madura
Epilepsie - Fr. Pinczker
Friedriech's Ataxia - Ms. Maher
Friedriech's Ataxia - Mr. Zachary
Glut1 - DS - Fr. Jordan
Heart Disease - Mr. Maxwell
Huntington - Krankheit - Fr. Arroyo
ION - Mr. Stevens
Muscular Dystrophy - Mr. Russ
MS - Ms. Chen
MS - Hr. Frey
MS - Fr. Glenn
MS - Fr. Helm
MS - Fr. Kay
MS - Hr. Kenneth
MS - Mr. Ozzello
MS - Fr. Sprague
ONH - Fr. Barlett
ONH - Ms. Hallie
ONH - Mr. Justin
ONH - Mr. Lawrence
ONH - Ms. Lilli
ONH - Ms. Manuela
MSA - Mr. Haywood
Parkinson's - Mr. Buckley
Parkinson's - Mr. Brown
Parkinson's - Mr. Budiono
Parkinson's - Ms. Chin
Parkinson's - Mr. Devlin
Parkinson's - Ms. Edwards
Parkinson's - Ms. Kluber
Parkinson's - Ms. Rouen
Parkinson's - Ms. Thomas
Parkinson's - Mr. Woodward
ROP - Shirdesh
ROP - Tatyana
Rett-Syndrom - Fr. Laura
Spinale Muskelatrophie - Fr. Gologan
Spinale Muskelatrophie - Hr. Justin
Spinale Muskelatrophie - Fr. Loredana
SMA - Ms. Nicole
SMA - Ms. Nirma
SOD - Claire
SOD - Ms. Frenette
SOD - Ms. Giulia
SOD - Ms. Megan
SOD - Mr. Peterson
Rückenmarksverletzung - Hr. Aldrich
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Allen
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Ben
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Carson
Rückenmarksverletzung - Hr. Iordache
Spinal Cord Injury - Ms. Jennifer
Rückenmarksverletzung - Hr. Maricelli
Spinal Cord Injury - Ms. Pai
Rückenmarksverletzung - Fr. Radu
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Savage
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Zuo
Stroke - Ms. Hollis
Stroke - Ms. Jing
Stroke - Mr. Li
Schlaganfall (Kind) - Frl. Farkas
Schlaganfall (Säugling) - Frl. Grecsó
Stroke (Infant) - Mr. Hildko