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Darek Fidyka was paralysed from the chest down in a knife attack in 2010, when one of his assailant’s vicious blows severed his spinal cord. Doctors gave the Polish fire fighter a one per cent chance of recovery.
Now, following a ground breaking surgery that used cells from his nose, the 40-year-old is walking again.
“When you can’t feel almost half your body, you are helpless, but when it starts coming back it’s like you were born again,” he tells the BBC‘s Panorama programme, which was granted unique access to the treatment and Fidyka’s rehabilitation over a one year period.
The procedure almost reads like something out of a science fiction novel. Surgeons in Poland, collaborating with scientists in London, transplanted olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs) collected from Fidyka’s nose into his spinal cord above and below where it had been cut. As the BBC explains, OECs form part of our sense of smell, and “act as pathway cells that enable nerve fibres in the olfactory system to be continually renewed”.
Darek Fidyka is walking again
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