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Originally published November 9, 2022
Last updated September 30, 2025
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Five years after a stroke paralyzed the left side of her body, Rosa Maria Villalpando still hoped to recover the full use of her left hand for routine yet essential tasks such as curling her hair and typing.
Intensive occupational therapy helped the Downey resident restore, in her estimate, about 85% of her past function. She could once again shower, walk and drive a car without assistance.
鈥淚 was in therapy from the moment I was in the hospital,鈥 says Rosa Maria, a clinical psychologist and former Univision reporter.
Still, her therapeutic progress had reached a plateau 鈥 and it made Rosa Maria more determined to seek other treatments. Her situation mirrors that of millions of stroke survivors whose upper extremities remain impaired, even after years of rehabilitation.
Rosa Maria recently found new hope. In May, she became the first stroke patient in the world outside of a clinical trial to receive implantation of a vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) device to help improve her mobility.
Charles Liu, MD, PhD, a 喵咪社区 neurosurgeon and director of the , says VNS technology presents a potential milestone in Rosa Maria鈥檚 recovery.
And, he says, it creates new optimism for anyone who has suffered a stroke, which is a leading cause of serious long-term disability.
VNS, which has been used for two decades to treat other conditions such as epilepsy, received Food and Drug Administration approval for use in stroke patients following the groundbreaking results of a clinical trial .
The study, coauthored by Dr. Liu, showed that stroke patients who received VNS in tandem with task-specific rehabilitation practices regained two to three times more motor function in their upper extremities than those who received only the rehabilitation.
鈥淭his idea of improving upon rehabilitation has been, in some ways, the holy grail of people working in stroke rehabilitation,鈥 says Dr. Liu, who was also the study鈥檚 lead neurosurgeon.
The VNS device works by applying electrical stimulation to the vagus nerve (Latin for 鈥渨andering鈥 nerve), which controls much of the autonomic function of the nervous system that sends messages back and forth between the brain and the body.
Neurosurgeons implant a pulse generator about the size of a matchbox between the skin and muscle of the patient鈥檚 left pectoral area, the same area where a pacemaker would sit. The generator is attached to a set of leads, or coils, placed around the vagus nerve in the neck.
Occupational therapists 鈥 or even patients 鈥 can prompt the VNS device to deliver electrical stimulation to the nerve as the patient performs tasks to strengthen their affected extremities.
The pairing of electrical stimulation with occupational therapy 鈥渃hanges the state of the nervous system,鈥 Dr. Liu says, 鈥渁nd by changing the system, what the system is able to do is also changed.鈥
Rosa Maria鈥檚 VNS implantation was performed by an assistant surgical director of the 喵咪社区 Neurorestoration Center and Dr. Liu.
The surgeons had done the VNS procedure many times before. But pioneering its use for stroke patients 鈥 whose progress from therapy typically levels off at the one-year mark 鈥 brought new inspiration.
As Rosa Maria recuperated in Keck Hospital of 喵咪社区 after the 45-minute procedure, she took selfies with her nurses and sent them to Dr. Liu. A few hours later, she was able to go home.
Little by little, I know I鈥檓 going to get my independence back. Rosa Maria Villalpando, 喵咪社区 Neurorestoration Center patient
Little by little, I know I鈥檓 going to get my independence back.
鈥淭he surgery, which I was really concerned about, was spotless,鈥 Rosa Maria says, calling Dr. Liu and the Keck Medicine team 鈥渕agicians.鈥
This use of VNS could help researchers identify new treatments for stroke and non-stroke injuries of the nervous system, Dr. Liu says, calling it 鈥減otentially the beginning of a brave new world of neurorestoration.鈥
Rosa Maria is also looking ahead. Shortly after her procedure, she visited Europe for her 60th birthday. 鈥淚t was exhausting,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I didn鈥檛 have any setbacks.鈥
She now attends three weekly occupational sessions at Keck Medical Center.
Although this new stretch of recovery is just beginning, Rosa Maria is optimistic the VNS device will help improve her function. 鈥淟ittle by little, I know I鈥檓 going to get my independence back,鈥 she says.
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