Paralysed man walks again with brain-controlled exoskeleton
Paralysed
man walks again with brain-controlled exoskeleton
By
Kate Kelland by Reuters Thursday, 3 October 2019 22:30 GMT
LONDON, Oct 3 (Reuters) - A
man paralysed from the shoulders down has been able to walk using a pioneering
four-limb robotic system, or exoskeleton, that is commanded and controlled by
signals from his brain.
With a ceiling-mounted harness for balance, the 28-year-old
tetraplegic patient used a system of sensors implanted near his brain to send
messages to move all four of his paralysed limbs after a two-year-long trial of
the whole-body exoskeleton.
The results, published in
The Lancet Neurology journal on Thursday, bring doctors a step closer to one
day being able to help paralysed patients drive computers using brain signals
alone, according to researchers who led the work.
But for now the exoskeleton
is purely an experimental prototype and is "far from clinical
application", they added.
"(This) is the first
semi-invasive wireless brain-computer system designed... to activate all four
limbs," said Alim-Louis Benabid, a neurosurgeon and professor at the
University of Grenoble, France, who co-led the trial.
He said previous
brain-computer technologies have used invasive sensors implanted in the brain,
where they can be more dangerous and often stop working. Previous versions have
also been connected to wires, he said, or have been limited to creating
movement in just one limb.
In this trial, two recording
devices were implanted, one either side of the patient's head between the brain
and the skin, spanning the sensorimotor cortex region of the brain that
controls sensation and motor function.
Each recorder contained 64
electrodes which collected brain signals and transmitted them to a decoding
algorithm. The system translated the brain signals into the movements the
patient thought about, and sent his commands to the exoskeleton.
Over 24 months, the patient
carried out various mental tasks to train the algorithm to understand his
thoughts and to progressively increase the number of movements he could make.
Commenting on the results,
Tom Shakespeare, a professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, said it was "a welcome and exciting advance" but added:
"Proof of concept is a long way from usable clinical possibility."
"A danger of hype
always exists in this field. Even if ever workable, cost constraints mean that
high-tech options are never going to be available to most people in the world
with spinal cord injury."
(Reporting by Kate Kelland Editing by Gareth Jones)
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