Unite 2 Fight Paralysis

Unite 2 Fight Paralysis U.S based & community led. We educate and accelerate functional recovery research — cure paralysis!

05/30/2026

Chronic neuropathic pain is the worst. Knives, cold acid, lightning bolts. This is how it has been described. For many, it never lets up. Although it is among the highest priorities to be solved from the perspective of the SCI community, there are no comprehensive answers. So what is the holdup? In our conversation with Dr. John “Kip” Kramer, from ICORD, we unpack this issue. We talk about what researchers know about neuropathic pain, its mechanism, what they are working on and what is on the horizon. Listen to episode 142 of the CureCast and get educated on the subject of pain.

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Run or wheel with Team U2FP! *E-assist allowed* Sunday, October 4th, 20261. Receive guaranteed admission to one of the m...
05/29/2026

Run or wheel with Team U2FP! *E-assist allowed*

Sunday, October 4th, 2026

1. Receive guaranteed admission to one of the most popular
marathons in the United States

2. Train hard for this nationally recognized marathon

3. Ask your friends and family to donate to your race efforts

4. Every dollar raised supports U2FP’s mission to cure paralysis

Register: [email protected]

05/11/2026

After seeing Jacob Goldsmith’s presentation at the symposium in Minneapolis and recently talking with him more about testosterone and recovery, I was inspired to finally get my testosterone checked. Really opened my eyes to how important it is for overall health and performance

A total testosterone number by itself doesn’t tell the whole story. Someone can have “normal” or even high testosterone on labs and still have symptoms if the hormone isn’t being properly used, converted, transported, or supported by the rest of the body.

1. Free Testosterone

This is one of the biggest missing pieces.

* Total testosterone = all testosterone in your blood
* Free testosterone = testosterone actually available for your body to use

A person can have:

* high total testosterone
* but low free testosterone

…because too much is bound up by proteins like SHBG.

2. SHBG (S*x Hormone Binding Globulin)

SHBG acts like a “carrier” that binds testosterone.

If SHBG is:

* too high → less usable testosterone
* too low → hormones can become unstable

Two guys with the same testosterone level can feel completely different depending on SHBG.

3. Albumin

Another protein that carries testosterone.
Bioavailable testosterone = free testosterone + loosely bound testosterone (mostly albumin-bound).

This helps show how much your body can realistically access.

We have spots to fill on our charity team for the Twin Cities 10-miler or Full Marathon, Sunday October 4th, 2026.EMAIL:...
05/05/2026

We have spots to fill on our charity team for the Twin Cities 10-miler or Full Marathon, Sunday October 4th, 2026.

EMAIL: [email protected]

*All wheelchairs and E-assist mobility devices are welcome for this race!*
•••

U2FP exists to accelerate progress toward recovery from spinal cord injury (SCI) by pushing for greater collaboration. To do this, we host an annual symposium that brings together SCI survivors, family members, scientists and clinicians; advocate for smart legislative funding in multiple states (over $40M
passed to date); host an educational podcast with top scientists and advocates; and place individuals with a spinal cord injury into SCI research labs to act as lived-experience consultants.

Our vision for a cure is restoration of one’s fully functional body, including relief from pain and spasms, return of bowel, bladder and sexual function, and recovery of normal sensation in addition to motor control. Improving any one of these individual issues would greatly improve independence and quality of life.
We work to deepen collaboration amongst scientists, investors, advocates, clinicians, and regulatory agencies.

U2FP's Virtual Silent Auction is live! Register now (it's free!) and bid on over 100 cool items or experiences that are ...
04/17/2026

U2FP's Virtual Silent Auction is live! Register now (it's free!) and bid on over 100 cool items or experiences that are up for grabs - these are just a random sampling of ALL the cool stuff on offer. All winning bids benefit U2FP's work for functional recovery - let's go!

Register for our Silent Auction (free!) starting tomorrow, Thursday April 16 at 5:30pm. And/or come to our Fundraising G...
04/15/2026

Register for our Silent Auction (free!) starting tomorrow, Thursday April 16 at 5:30pm. And/or come to our Fundraising Gala at the Bird’s Nest on Saturday, April 18. Our goal is to raise $30,000 for functional recovery after SCI. Join us!

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Well, I’ve got some sad news, some bad news, and some good news coming out of Wisconsin. First, the sad news: effectivel...
04/03/2026

Well, I’ve got some sad news, some bad news, and some good news coming out of Wisconsin.

First, the sad news: effectively, our window to pass our $5 million Spinal Cord Injury Research Grant Bill during this session of the Wisconsin Legislature is now closed. The State Senate adjourned on Thursday, March 19, 2026 for the last time this legislative session. And once again, our bill was left out in the cold.

The bad news: our author in the Senate, Sen. Van Wanggaard, announced his retirement last week on the Senate's last day.

Although the bill never got passed under his authorship, having a Republican as the lead author in the Senate seemed to give permission for many more Republican Senators and Assembly members to co-sponsor our bill.

As for the good news: many other lawmakers who have consistently been against the WI SCI Research Bill in past sessions have also announced retirements in the face of the upcoming election this November.
Some of these lawmakers have created quite the speed-bumps for our bill over the last few sessions; these soon-to-be-retiring legislators include Sen. Steve Nass, Sen. Rob Hutton, Rep. Kevin Petersen, as well as the majority leader of the Senate, Devin LeMahieu.

Assembly Speaker Rep. Robin Vos (who holds the record for the longest-serving Speaker in WI legislative history) has also announced his retirement. While Vos was not an explicit opponent of our bill, he didn’t do much to help our cause. On top of all this, Gov. Tony Evers (who has always been in support of our bill) has also announced that he will not be running for governor again this fall.

This will be the first time in 16 years that all three Wisconsin leaders (Governor, Senate Leader, and Assembly Speaker) are voluntarily not returning for reelection.

Majority control of the Senate may change during this November election where over half of the Senate seats (17 out of 33) will be on the ballot. New district maps were introduced in 2024, which were mandated by the WI Supreme Court to reduce gerrymandering in the state.

Regardless of which party controls the Assembly, Senate, or Governorship after the election, the Wisconsin Cure Advocacy Network will be coming back next session to work on getting our Spinal Cord Injury Research Grant bill passed!

We have laid an incredibly solid foundation for our bill over the last six years and continue to maintain excellent relationships throughout the Wisconsin Senate and Assembly. We’ve shown that when our bill makes it to the floor it is incredibly popular. Which is why we are not giving up, but digging in and strategizing for the next legislative session. We are confident that whoever is elected to the newly open seats this coming November will see our bill as a great investment for the state as well as the right thing to do for the citizens of Wisconsin.

2026 Symposium Videos Available!This year’s symposium had more energy, engagement and excitement than ever. Part retrosp...
04/02/2026

2026 Symposium Videos Available!

This year’s symposium had more energy, engagement and excitement than ever. Part retrospective and reflection, part assessment and analysis, our presenters covered histories and strategies from almost every facet of SCI research and recovery. All of that enthusiasm translated well to our Capital Roll on day three (not recorded), where we kicked off our campaign to increase SCI research funding at the federal level.

As always, we’ve provided links to our speaker lineup, symposium agenda, and full-color conference program, with tons of helpful content designed to help you contextualize the presentations.

We at U2FP are proud to make these videos available to the public for free. We also provide free access to all of our past symposiums, which total over 50 hours of presentations from over a decade of recorded talks (you can scroll down on our Video Library page to access these).

This on-going service is made possible by the generous support of our symposium sponsors and donors like you.

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Address

528 Hennepin Avenue, #606
Minneapolis, MN
55403

Telephone

+18885642228

Website

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