Patient from Grenada exhibits rapid improvement in sensation, hand function/writing, motor function/strength, walking, speech, and taste following PSE treatment by
Improvement in Wallenberg Syndrome symptoms including sensation, balance, swallowing, and post-stroke pain following treatment by Dr. Tobinick, 3.5 years after
Sustained improvement in walking, spasticity, phonation, and cognition following PSE treatment by Dr. Tobinick, 7 years after brain bleed. Filmed
Patient and his partner discuss improvements after PSE treatment by Dr. Tobinick, 3 years after stroke. Sustained improvements in post-stroke
Wife discusses patient’s improvement in post-stroke pain and fatigue one year after PSE treatment by Dr. Tobinick. Filmed on May
Icelandic patient and mother discuss sustained improvements in cognition, fatigue, spasticity, walking, and behavior following treatment by Dr. Tobinick, 5
Immediate improvement in post-stroke pain, balance, vision, hearing, speech, and swallowing following PSE treatment by Dr. Tobinick, 12 years after
Patient from London notes multiple improvements in post-stroke pain, sensation, walking, balance, brain fog, and speech after PSE treatment by
Patient from England notes improvements in post-stroke pain, sensation, fatigue, balance, walking, brain fog, and reduced spasticity and clonus after
Improvement in Wallenberg stroke symptoms including post-stroke pain, walking, spasticity, sensation, fatigue, vision, and hearing following treatment by Dr. Tobinick,
Perispinal etanercept is a method of targeting detrimental neuroinflammation using etanercept, a special anti-inflammatory drug, delivered utilizing a novel, non-invasive injection method.
Perispinal etanercept is NOT experimental. Perispinal etanercept has been used to treat more than 5,000 chronic stroke patients since 2010 at the Institute of Neurological Recovery.
No, it is not too late. Neuroinflammation can last for years, or even decades, after brain injury. Life-changing neurological improvements following perispinal etanercept treatment performed weeks, months, years, or even decades after stroke or brain injury are not uncommon.
Referrals are not required. The Institute of Neurological Recovery has received, and welcomes, referrals from neurologists, speech pathologists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, primary care physicians, online stroke groups, and, of course, patients and their family members.