(Jeannie Kever, Houston Chronicle)
With a mechanical wheeze, Eugene Alford has stepped into the future, a mix of science fiction and high-tech research that promises a freedom once unimaginable for the millions with spinal cord injuries or other disabilities.
“I’m not going to sneak up on anybody,” joked Alford, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon who was paralyzed 4½ years ago by a falling tree.
But his halting and noisy steps, made with a robotic exoskeleton in a project led by a University of Houston engineering professor, illustrate new possibilities opening up for people with disabilities.
“We have no shortage of dreams,” said Jose Luis Contreras-Vidal, the professor, who came to UH from the University of Maryland last winter. “Just a few years ago, the bottleneck was technology. That is no longer the case.”
For now, the exoskeleton is guided mostly by a joystick. But Contreras-Vidal and a small crew of assistants are mapping brainwaves in preparation for using them to guide the device.
Last week, Alford moved the exoskeleton – known as “Rex,” for robotic exoskeleton as well as for its manufacturer, New Zealand-based Rex Bionics – by blinking after the brainwaves produced by his eyes was isolated and programmed into a laptop computer.
That illustrates how the device can work for people who have no use of their hands, Contreras-Vidal said. But he said the main thing setting his work apart from other experimental approaches is that it relies on an external brain-machine interface, rather than on electrodes implanted in the user’s brain.
The idea of using robots to restore mobility drew attention last month, when the journal Nature published a study that showed a paralyzed woman using a brain-computer interface to control a robotic arm to move a cup of coffee to her mouth. Implanted electrodes sent signals to a computer that translated them into operating orders for the robotic arm.Intangible benefits
Contreras-Vidal envisions the user wearing a headset similar to Bluetooth wireless technology, an approach that he said will be less expensive and less invasive. He predicts the interface will be ready to test later this summer. Clinical trials could begin at Methodist Hospital by early fall, said Dr. Robert Grossman, co-director of the Methodist Neurological Institute.
(Read the full story at the Houston Chronicle)
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