Skip to main content

Technological advances highlighted in this issue include nasal cells used in a spinal cord transplant, telehealth kiosks, tips to control technology vendor demos, the risk of medical device hacking, a robotic exoskeleton whose developer is seeking approval for home use, and more.

Health Care Technology

Nasal Cells Used in Spinal Cord Transplant

Scientists have reported that cell transplants combined with other interventions have enabled a man with a severed spinal cord to walk again.

The case involves a 38-year-old man who sustained traumatic transaction of the thoracic spinal cord at upper vertebral level Th9. There was an 8-mm gap between the spinal cord stumps. The stumps remained connected only by a 2-mm rim of spared tissue. At 21 months after injury, the patient presented symptoms of a clinically complete spinal cord injury (American Spinal Injury Association class A-ASIAA).

Log in or create a free account to keep reading.


Join APTA to get unlimited access to content.


You Might Also Like...

Column

President's Note | What It Means to Be Your Professional Home

Jun 1, 2026

In this issue of APTA Magazine, we focus on the second pillar of APTA's Strategic Framework for 2030: Empowering Our Members. The goal of this pillar?

Column

Defining Moment | From Capitol Hill to the Clinic Curb

Jun 1, 2026

One PT learned that advocacy doesn't always take place in Washington, D.C. Sometimes, it starts on the sidewalk outside your clinic.

Article

The Top Five Takeaways From APTA CSM

Jun 1, 2026

What we learned together during the largest educational and networking physical therapy event in the country.