Polylaminin promotes regeneration after spinal cord injury (2010)

48 zac23or 7 9/9/2025, 7:27:28 PM researchgate.net ↗

Comments (7)

p33p · 11h ago
This paper is from 2010. Can the OP discuss why this is relevant today.
zac23or · 10h ago
flyinglizard · 10h ago
I don't know what's wilder, regaining full functionality in spinal cord injuries or that URL.
Terr_ · 10h ago
Tangentially: There's interesting research out there indicating that cellular repair is guided and promoted by the local electrical fields from surrounding tissues.

For example: "Treating Scars After Burns With Pulsed Electric Fields in the Rat Model" - https://academic.oup.com/jbcr/article-abstract/45/6/1553/772...

I wonder if we (or at least, our descendants) will figure out limb regrowth before we figure out functional immortality.

brennanpeterson · 9h ago
Not sure on limbs, but for fast bone and tooth repair it works.

https://www.nature.com/articles/srep31724

CGMthrowaway · 9h ago
wewewedxfgdf · 10h ago
So much stuff seems to work in rats and mice but not people.

Perhaps we should genetically move humanity over time to be more rat like.