Spine Implant Helps Paralyzed People Exercise
An anonymous reader writes "British engineers have created the first muscle-stimulating microchip small enough that several can be implanted in a person's spinal canal. In addition to providing enough stimulation to, say, let users pedal a stationary bicycle, they could also be used for things like stimulating bladder muscles to help overcome incontinence. Their breakthrough is that the devices package everything into one tiny unit. Lasers cut tiny electrodes from platinum foil, which are then folded into a 3D shape that looks like the pages of a book. These pages, in turn, wrap around the nerve roots."
This is an exciting time to be alive. I wonder what the next 20 years will bring on this front. It'll be interesting if we can someday map all the output of the motor cortex and build wireless links to get around severed spinal nerves.
For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
implant that provides...stimulation. Battery operated? I hope they're rechargeable.
I just called my broker. This is one IPO I don't want to miss.
I need trepanation like I need a hole in the head.
Avoid the press-release reprinting site, and go for the pictures.
http://www.epsrc.ac.uk/newsevents/news/2010/Pages/spinalimplant.aspx
Let's just say that there are other "lifestyle issues" that could be resolved through neural stimulation.
But I remember that disconnected nerves are said to atrophy or die, so this might work better for new injuries than old ones.
Bruce Perens.
I currently have an ANS spinal cord stimulator implanted for chronic pain and cannot imagine life without it. For three years before the implant I was on enough methadone and dilaudid to to not only knock a horse out but take most of the farm along with it. My device is about the size of half a pack of cigarettes and is implanted above my right hip. The cable runs up right between my shoulder blades and enters my spine there.
The size and placement of the device does not concern me much but something smaller would be welcome. The batteries are rechargeable with an induction antennae and designed to last about 10 years. I can only hope that by the time I have to think about a replacement something like the devices in this article will be available.
8 surgeries and countless procedures. Drugs of all types with all the side effects and problems that come with them. And in the end a tiny trickle of electric current gives me vastly more relief than anything. I can walk, hold my children and work a normal day again.