A Bionic Leg That Rewires Stroke Victims' Brains
waderoush writes "A startup called Tibion in Sunnyvale, CA, has begun selling battery-powered robotic exoskeletons that help stroke victims with one-sided weakness relearn how to stand, sit, walk, and negotiate stairs. The leg isn't a permanent attachment; the company says patients who use the device for 45 minutes a week for four weeks experience significant gains in walking speed that persist and even improve months after the treatment. They believe that the $40,000 device — which includes sensors that respond to subtle signs of user intentions, such a shift in weight — provides feedback that triggers neuroplasticity, the brain's ability to rewire itself to repair damage."
Here is the difference between a journalist writing something and what a scientist says.
Journalist: "Bionic Leg That Rewires Stroke Victims' Brains"
FTA: "And this movement provides proprioceptive feedback that, over time, helps patients’ brains rewire themselves, so that they are eventually able to carry out the motion on their own"
Draw your own conclusions
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
...that also rewires brains.
Cart before the horse on this one.
Not to throw cold water on what sounds like a fascinating innovation, but are there any studies that show that it works?
Or is it just a very expensive placebo that provides a magic-feather effect for the stroke patients, giving them enough support and confidence to put some more effort into their therapy?
Though if it had a bit more oomph to it, I could see quite a lot of use for people with extensive lower-body damage...internalize the structure, and it sounds like it could be a pretty handy prosthetic, albeit an expensive one.
In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
A stately pleasure dome decree
"Why does the man walk his leg?
Because the man is smarter than the leg. If the leg were smarter
than the man, the leg would walk the man."
It's good to see the advancements that they are making in this area. Along with the system developed in Israel recently for parapalegics, advancement in the mobility realm seems to be improving lately.
Hopefully they will put together some decent studies so that it not only gets additional public attention, but health insurers might begin to pay for usage in treatment (if research is conclusive of course).
Great stuff!
BRAINS!
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
For $40,000 dollars I'd be willing to pretend I were someones leg. They could use me to prop themselves up and tell me where they want to go and when. For that bargain they get the best AI ever created as well as a built in risk aversion system that will help them escape from fires or bears.
We've never had bionic limbs cause changes in people's minds before, right?
I am officially gone from
While the preliminary results are somewhat limited, what a facinating idea. It continues to astound me how versatile our brains really are. The original internet, capable of rerouting around problems.
I want one that makes me run faster and jump higher. Like those suits in Avatar.
"It seems that we are at the age where life stops giving us things, and starts taking them away..." Indiana Jones
This prothesis is the functional equivalent of having Dan Dailey standing there, playing the ukulele and singing "I'm gonna move that toe" over and over?
#DeleteChrome
Reminds me of the difference between scientists and science advocates:
http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=2088#comic
Stroke has affected my immediately family so it is nice to see something that can help people to walk, and possibly enhance their brain function. But who could afford this ? The pool of people that have insurance, insurance that actually pays instead of fighting, is getting smaller all the time.
...then you are saying that exercising stroke vitcim's affected limbs doesn't improve their mobility. Which is kind of a dumb thing to say.
Restricted - well meaning, useful, helpful, yet restricted - exercise seems very doubtful a thing to beat a machine which can literally give partially paralyzed people back a fuller use of their limbs under, essentially, their own power in their own lives, until such time as it is not needed.
It's so obviously likely to be useful, that pulling the "where are the studies to prove that this new thing is better than this old thing" is disingenuous at best and subversive at worst. Make those studies!
Hey, you should have reworded that title BEFORE posting it to slash dot. I bet a lot of people are reading this thinking it's some kind of medical break through. You're going to piss people off and loose readers. Thanks for nothing, assholes.
If I'm understanding how this works correctly, I think a more advanced version of this technology be able to, for example, train a person to pitch a perfect curve ball or do a martial arts move.