Funding gift for spinal injury clinical trial
A clinical trial to test the efficacy and safety of the transplantation of nasal cells to treat chronic spinal cord...
A clinical trial to test the efficacy and safety of the transplantation of nasal cells to treat chronic spinal cord...
A world-first trial to help improve the lives of Australians living with a debilitating spinal cord injury is a step closer with a $6.8 million Medical Research Future Fund grant.
Griffith medical graduate and Gold Coast University Hospital junior doctor Dinesh Palipana thinks about walking a lot, since a car accident left him a quadriplegic part-way through his medicine degree.
More than 12,000 Australians are living with spinal cord injury and there is at least one new occurrence every day....
A Phase I human clinical trial is set to commence to test the efficacy and safety of the transplantation of olfactory cell nerve bridges to treat chronic spinal cord injury.
Griffith University’s BioSpine team, led by Dr Claudio Pizzolato, has won a coveted place in a health tech accelerator program...
Griffith University is seeking five people living with spinal cord injury to be part of stage two of an innovative trial which will test intensive rehabilitation for those living with chronic spinal cord paralysis.
Flexible implanted electronics a step closer towards clinical applications with innovative silicon carbide technology.
World-leading Griffith research into the development of a cell-based therapy for treating spinal cord injuries has received a $5.7m boost from the state government.
The Queensland Government has invested $5 million in a Griffith University pre-clinical trial to prove that a “nerve bridge” across...