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U.S. stroke victims train brains to see again
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 08 - 02 - 2007


A new study bolsters evidence
that people partially blinded by a stroke or brain injury may
be able to improve their field of vision by teaching new parts
of their brain to see, U.S. researchers said on Thursday, according to Reuters.
Using a computer workout program for the brain, about
three-quarters of patients in the study could see better after
six months of treatment with the therapy, which trains
neighboring brain cells to take over for damaged areas.
The therapy, which is marketed by NovaVision of Boca Raton,
Florida and won U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval in
2003, is controversial among neurologists because it challenges
the widely held belief that vision lost through brain injury or
stroke can't be treated.
A German study published in the British Journal of
Ophthalmology in 2005 pronounced the therapy a flop.
But NovaVision says the latest study, conducted on patients
in the last two years and whose results were presented at the
International Stroke Conference in San Francisco on Thursday,
reinforces its contention that the treatment works.
NovaVision says the results of the therapy proved the brain
is plastic, capable of rewiring itself even long after an
injury. The idea of "neuroplasticity" has been used to help
stroke patients recover lost speech and movement but vision had
been thought to be immutable.
"It makes no sense to believe there is no plasticity in the
visual cortex," said Dr. Jose Romano, a neurologist at the
University of Miami who conducted the study and serves on
NovaVision's scientific advisory board.
Vision restoration therapy could help the 1.5 million
stroke or brain injury victims in the United States who have
visual defects that make everyday tasks like reading and
watching television a challenge, the company says.
SEEING MORE
Romano and colleagues evaluated 161 patients who underwent
treatment at 16 U.S. research centers for six months.
Using a special laptop and attached chin rest, patients
stared at a fixed dot while various lights flashed along the
border of their blind spot. They clicked a computer mouse each
time they could detect the flash of light.
After six months of twice daily therapy, 76 percent of
patients were helped, regaining on average 5 degrees of their
visual field, Romano said in an interview with Reuters.
That is roughly the equivalent of a hand held at arm's
length, then moved five inches to the right or left. "It allows
you to read and to not bump into things," Romano said.
Stroke researcher Randolf Marshall of Columbia University
Medical Center in New York, who has used the therapy in his own
practice, examined six patients before and after one month of
therapy using functional magnetic resonance imaging or fMRI.
Marshall, who has no ties to NovaVision, found that all six
showed increased activity in the area of the brain bordering
the injury.
"The brain has essentially learned to use more of its
activity ... in this particular trained location. We are really
looking at a pattern of learning," he said.
Last month, NovaVision raised $20 million in its third
round of financing, snagging Johnson & Johnson as one of its
investors. The $6,000 treatment is not covered by most
insurance, but the company is seeking reimbursement under the
U.S. government's Medicare health program for the elderly.


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