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Much of Dr. Craven's research involves understanding the relationship between spinal cord injury and osteoporosis. "If you immobilize astronauts in space, they lose bone," says Dr. Craven. "But when they return to Earth and normal activity, the bone comes back. However, when spinal cord injury patients become active again after months of immobilization, the bone doesn't come back."
It's important to learn why because bone loss makes people with spinal cord injuries very prone to hard-to-heal fractures. These fractures can lead to weeks of hospitalization, lost work time, family time and functional independence.
Dr. Craven's research group is one of only two teams in North America tackling this problem of bone density loss. "As researchers learn more about the cells responsible for bone growth, and as our technology gets better, we're starting to understand what's happening in people with spinal cord injury."
Dr. Craven has harnessed new imaging technology to develop a leading-edge tool for measuring bone density around the knee. "Using this tool, we've shown that people with spinal cord injury have 50 per cent less lower extremity bone mineral there than their peers. Until recently, we couldn't quantify the risk."
Dr. Craven and her colleagues are also involved in the first large, multi-centre trial of a drug called risedronate to try and turn off bone loss before it occurs.
With neuroscientists edging closer to "exciting new possibilities for cure" for spinal cord injuries, it's even more important that people with these injuries maintain good bone density, says Dr. Craven. "If you don't have a skeleton to hold you up, you won't be able to take advantage of this."
Curriculum Vitae
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