01 · The Goal

Repair the injured spinal cord and restore movement — one of biology’s hardest goals

The goal is to repair the injured spinal cord and restore movement and sensation — by reawakening surviving circuits and, hardest of all, regrowing severed nerve fibers across the injury. We pursue it with everything science has, and we are honest that it is among the hardest problems in all of medicine.

02 · Why It Matters

The spinal cord is the great cable linking brain to body. It is central nervous tissue, so when injured its nerve fibers do not naturally regrow, and the connection below the injury is lost — causing paralysis. Few losses are more devastating, and few problems in biology are harder. But progress is real: people have regained movement once thought gone. Pursuing spinal-cord regeneration — honestly, without false promises — is the flagship of movement because the stakes and the difficulty are both at their maximum.

03 · What We’re Trying to Achieve

We are building the capability to restore the brain-to-body connection: reactivating spinal circuits that survive an injury, bridging the injury site, regrowing severed axons across it, and pairing any biological repair with intensive rehabilitation that harnesses the nervous system’s plasticity.

04 · How It Works

Reawaken what survives; regrow what was severed

Reactivating dormant circuits Demonstrated

After many injuries some spinal circuitry survives but goes silent. Intensive, activity-based rehabilitation that harnesses the nervous system’s own plasticity has helped people recover movement once thought lost — by reawakening what remains.

Bridging the injury Frontier

Cell therapies, scaffolds, and growth signals aim to bridge the injury site and guide severed fibers across it.

Regrowing spinal axons Frontier

Switching injured spinal nerve cells back into a growth state — the core challenge — has been shown partially in animals.

Repair plus rehabilitation Clinical

The strongest results pair biological repair with activity-based rehabilitation that harnesses neuroplasticity.

05 · Who’s Building It

Cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers.

Universities & institutes

Academic spinal-cord-injury, neural-engineering, and rehabilitation research centers developing activity-based rehabilitation, cell therapies, and axon-regrowth approaches.

Government & programs

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS, NIH) · Department of Defense spinal-injury research · ARPA-H · NIH neural-engineering programs.

Enabling science base

axon regeneration biology · cell therapy & scaffolds · neuroplasticity · activity-based rehabilitation.

06 · Technologies

The technologies: activity-based rehabilitation that reawakens surviving circuits; cell therapies and scaffolds to bridge the injury; axon-growth biology aiming to regrow severed fibers; neural interfaces that can route signals; and activity-based rehabilitation that drives recovery.

07 · Breakthroughs

Movement restored via rehabilitation Demonstrated

Intensive, activity-based rehabilitation has restored voluntary movement in people with serious spinal injury — by reactivating surviving circuits.

Axon regrowth in animals Frontier

Reactivating a growth state in injured spinal neurons has produced partial axon regrowth in animal studies.

Bridging strategies Frontier

Scaffold and cell approaches to bridge the injury are advancing in research.

Neuroplasticity-driven recovery Demonstrated

Activity-based rehabilitation produces real functional gains by harnessing the nervous system’s plasticity.

08 · Remaining Challenges

The honest challenges, stated plainly: true regrowth of severed spinal fibers across an injury is not achieved in people — it is partial in animals. Regrown fibers must find their correct targets amid inhibitory scar tissue. Circuit-reactivation helps where tissue survives but cannot restore a fully severed cord. This is among the hardest goals in biology, and we will not overstate a single step. What is real: activity-based rehabilitation recovery. What is frontier: regrowing the cord itself.

09 · Mature Capability

The future, fully built

A person paralyzed by spinal injury — or told they would never move again — has their spinal cord helped to reconnect: surviving circuits reawakened, the injury bridged, fibers regrown where science allows, movement and feeling returned, all amplified by rehabilitation. Spinal injury becomes something we work to reverse, honestly, not only adapt to.

Honest boundary: activity-based rehabilitation has restored some movement in people; true regrowth of a severed spinal cord remains a hard frontier, shown only partially in animals. We will never overstate it. AI supports human clinicians; it never replaces them.
10 · Evidence Vault

The proof, for this capability

Cited as evidence the capability is real, not as partners or endorsers.

Activity-based rehabilitation

Intensive, activity-based rehabilitation has restored voluntary movement in people with spinal injury by reactivating surviving circuits. Stage: Demonstrated.

Axon regrowth (animal)

Reactivating a growth state produced partial spinal axon regrowth in animals. Stage: Frontier.

Bridging the injury

Scaffold and cell strategies to bridge the injury are advancing in research. Stage: Frontier.

Honest framing

Real organizations are cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers. True regrowth of a severed cord is not achieved in people; nothing here claims it is.

Help build this future

Every signature grows the movement to make spinal-cord recovery real — honestly — and free at the point of need.

Paid for by Michael Floyd for President.

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