Beauty develops prostheses that move like real limbs

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Release date: 2007-02-27

Beauty develops prosthetics that act like real limbs According to a new study, a new technique called re-nervation of target muscles can help nerve-controlled prostheses move like real limbs. Researchers at the Chicago Rehabilitation Institute (RIC; IL, USA) have developed a new technology to improve control of mechanical prostheses. A target re-nervous surgery was performed on a 24-year-old woman who underwent limb resection at the left upper extremity humerus neck. Re-nervous surgery proceeds to the nerve re-growth to the appropriate muscle, and the signal transmitted to the excised limb is transmitted to the robotic arm (via the surface electrode). This provides the patient with better limb function, and the patient says she uses a neurally controlled prosthesis for several hours a day. Moreover, using the target-aware re-nervation technique, the hand-sensing nerve forms a re-access to the patient's chest skin, so when the patient touches the skin, she feels that the hand is touched. This eventually made her "feel" to touch the fake hand, as if she were touching with her own hand. The results of these studies were published on February 3, 2007, The Lancet. Prosthetic Arm Moves Like A Real Limb A new technique called targeted muscle reinnervation allows a neuro-controlled prosthetic arm to move as new study. Researchers at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago (RIC; IL, USA) have developed the new technique that offers improved control Of a motorized prosthetic arm. They are conducting a reinervation procedure on the 24-year old woman with a left arm amputation at the humeral neck. The reinnervation procedure allowed the re-routed nerves to grow into the appropriated muscle and direct the signals that they Used to send to the amputated arm to the robotic arm (via surface electrodes) instead. This gave the patient better functional movement in her arm, and she reported using her neuro-controlled prosthesis for many hours a day. further, using targeted sensory reinnervation , the sensation nerves to the hand were re-routed to a patch of skin on the patient's chest, so that when the patient is touched on this skin, she feels That her hand is being touched. This should eventually let her 'feel' what she is touching with an artThe results were published in the February 3, 2007, issue of The Lancet. --- This article was compiled by Meditech Medical Network -- --Meddy Medical Network

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