🌟 Celebrating Europe Day with Piezo4Spine! 🌟

This inspiring talk about the Piezo4Spine project was part of the Europe Day celebrations, highlighting unity and scientific collaboration across Europe. 🇪🇺🔬
Major Media Coverage on ICMM’s Hydrogel for Spinal Cord Repair!

Numerous outlets have reported on the Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid (ICMM – CSIC) and their innovative hydrogel developed in the Piezo4Spine project.
New Piezo4Spine publication in Acta Biomaterialia

“Hybrid hydrogels support neural cell culture development under magentic actuation at high frequency”
New Piezo4Spine publication in ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

“Synergy of Nanotopography and Electrical Conductivity of PEDOT/PSS for Enhanced Neuronal Development”
First Piezo4Spine Newsletter

Our first Piezo4Spine Newsletter is out!
Discover the achievements and breakthroughs of the Piezo4Spine project in our annual newsletter! This edition is packed with insights from our first year in spinal cord research.
2nd Project Meeting: Flourishing Progress in the Enchanting City of Ferrara, Italy! 🇮🇹

Greetings from Ferrara! We’re delighted to share the tremendous success of our second project meeting in this picturesque Italian city.
New Piezo4Spine publication!

“Nanorheology and Nanoindentation Revealed a Softening and an Increased Viscous Fluidity of Adherent Mammalian Cells upon Increasing the Frequency” was published in the prestigious journal “Small”
🌍 European Researchers Nights

A Celebration of Discovery and Fun!
A Breakthrough in Spinal Cord Injury Recovery: Targeted Neuronal Regeneration

A groundbreaking study, published in “Science” could redefine spinal cord injury (SCI) recovery!
Nature publication breaks boundaries: Brain-Spine Interface empowers paralyzed individual to walk again!

“My wish was to walk again and I believed it was possible. I tried many things before and now I have to learn how to walk naturally again,” the participant, Gert-Jan, reported in the press briefing. “I can walk at least 100 or 200 metres, depending on the day, and I can stand for two or three minutes unsupported.”