The Economist February 12th 2022 Science & technology 71
weretaken from theyoungest fully ex
pandedleavesoneveryplantintheexperi
mentandstudied.
Noneoftheplantsexposedtothetraffic
noisedidwell.Analysisoftheirleavesre
vealedthatallofthemweresuffering.The
chemicalcompoundshydrogenperoxide
and malondialdehyde are indicators of
stressinplantsandbothwerefoundat
muchhigherlevelsinthespecimensex
posedtothetrafficnoise.Mostnotably,
malondialdehydelevelsinthesageplants
exposedtonoiseweredoublewhatthey
wereinthosegrowninsilenceandhydro
genperoxidelevelswerethreetimeshigh
er in French marigolds grown withthe
noisethanthosegrowninsilence.
Thesecompoundswerenotalone.The
teamfoundthata rangeofhormonesnor
mallyassociatedwithhealthygrowthand
developmentinplantswerepresentatsig
nificantlyreducedlevelsintheplantsex
posedtothenoise.Twostresshormones,
jasmonicacidandabscisicacid,whichare
normallyproducedtofendoffinsectat
tacksanddealwithsaltysoilorverycold
temperatures, were elevated. Even the
weight ofthefreshly clippedleavesdif
fered—clippings fromplants exposed to
noiseconsistentlyweighedlessthanclip
pingsfromplantsgrowninsilence.
DrGhotbiRavandi’sresultswerepub
lished in the journal Basic and Applied
Ecology. Hisfindings makeitclear that,
thoughplantslackears,thevibrationsgen
eratedbythenoiseoftrafficstillbothers
themenoughto triggerpotentstressre
sponses that are not much different to
those that would be found in plants
exposedtodrought,highsalinityorheavy
metalsintheirsoil.
Thenextquestioniswhetherallnoise
pollutionaffectsallspeciesinthesame
way.Thenaturalworldisbynomeanssi
lent.Alpinemeadowsareexposedtono
shortageofcacophonousgales.Fernsgrow
alongtheedgesofturbulentpoolsfedby
thunderous waterfalls. Whether some
plantspecieshaveevolvedcopingmecha
nisms,whichmightonedaybecollected
andtransferredintourbandwellingspe
cies,isa mysteryworthexploring.n
Neurology
Standing ovation
F
ouryearsagoMichelRoccatiwasin
volved in a motorcycle accident. He suf
fered what neurologists call a “complete”
spinalcord injury—he lost all sensation
below the site of the damage to his spine
and he could no longer move his legs. In
December last year, however, the young
Italian stood up on the streets of Lausanne,
Switzerland, and took a short walk.
Mr Roccati’s remarkable steps, support
ed by a wheeled walking frame, were the
conclusion of more than a decade of work
by Grégoire Courtine, a neuroscientist at
the Federal Institute of Technology in Lau
sanne, and Jocelyne Bloch, a neurosurgeon
at Lausanne University Hospital.
The scientists had fitted Mr Roccati
with a device that stimulated nerves in his
back that once controlled muscles in his
lower body and legs, but which had lain
dormant since his accident.
Even after a severe spinal injury, the
nerves that control activities such as walk
ing often remain intact below any dam
aged tissue. In people with paralysis, how
ever, the damaged tissue interrupts or
weakens any electrical signals coming
from the brain.
Dr Courtine and Dr Bloch developed a
waferthin device with electrodes that
couldtargetthedormantnerves. Once im
planted into Mr Roccati’s back, the device
sent in pulses of electricity that mimicked
those normally present in the nerves of an
uninjured person as they walk.
By doing this, the device acted like an
amplifier for any electrical signals coming
from Mr Roccati’s brain. Those signals
would normally be blocked by his dam
aged spinal tissue and be incapable of acti
vating the nerves in his lower back. But
with the stimulation device in place, Mr
Roccati was able to voluntarily control
those oncedormant nerves, allowing him
to move his legs and walk.
Mr Roccati was one of three paralysed
volunteers who took part in a small clinical
trial of the device, details of which were
published this week in the journal Nature
Medicine. The device worked well enough
that all three users in the trial were able to
stand up and take a few steps almost im
mediately after they had recovered from
the surgery to have it implanted.
This was a marked improvement on
previous implementations of this kind of
technology, in which scientists had repur
posed nerve implants normally used to
treat chronic pain. In the few instances
where those experiments had been suc
cessful, it had taken many months of train
ing for patients to learn to walk again.
Dr Courtine’s and Dr Bloch’s new device
can be configured to fire its electrical im
pulses in many different patterns, each of
which corresponds to a different activity.
Patients in the trial were not only able to
stand and walk, but eventually also to
swim and cycle.
The new device will need approval from
medical regulators before it can be used in
clinics. Its inventors set up a company
called NeuroRestore, which is working
with Onward Medical, a Dutch company, to
commercialise their new device.
The impact of the device on the lives of
those in the small Swiss trial, however, has
already been dramatic. Mr Roccati high
lights the little things—walking up stairs,
for example, or standing in the shower. At a
bar, he can stand up to chat with friends.
After training, he is nowalsoable to walk
around for two hours everyday.“With the
walker,” he says. “I am free.”n
Spinal implants allow paralysed people to walk, swim and cycle again
Michel Roccati (left), walks with David Mzee (right), a fellow spinal-implant patient