Mind-controlled device may help stroke patients move paralysed hands

|
Saturday, May 27, 2017
mind-controlled device may help stroke patients move paralysed hands

New York: US researchers have developed a new mind-controlled device that reads brain signals, converts them into motion and thus helps stroke patients to retrain their brains to move their paralysed hands.

Stroke is the second leading cause of disability, after dementia, globally. Nearly six million die and another five million are left permanently disabled. 
 
 The study showed that stroke patients who learned to use their minds to open and close the device fitted over their paralysed hands gained some control over their hands.
 
 By mentally controlling the device with the help of a brain-computer interface, participants trained the uninjured parts of their brains to take over functions previously performed by injured areas of the brain, the researchers said.
 
 "We have shown that a brain-computer interface using the uninjured hemisphere can achieve meaningful recovery in chronic stroke patients," said Eric Leuthardt, Professor  at Washington University in St. Louis. 
 
 The device -- Ipsihand -- comprises a cap that contains electrodes to detect electrical signals in the brain, a computer that amplifies the signals, and a movable brace that fits over the paralysed hand. 
 
 The device detects the wearer's intention to open or close the paralysed hand, and moves the hand in a pincer-like grip, with the second and third fingers bending to meet the thumb.
 
 For the study, published in the journal Stroke, the team recruited 10 moderately to severely impaired stroke patients and trained them to use the device at home. 
 
 Participants underwent a standard motor skills evaluation that measured their ability to grasp, grip and pinch with their hands, and to make large motions with their arms.
 
 After 12 weeks of using the device, the patients' scores increased an average of 6.2 points on a 57-point scale, the researchers said.
 

0 Comment

Performing a liver transplant on this three-month-old baby was a deeply gratifying moment in my career 

Surgery has, and continues to fascinate me. I chose a surgical residency due to its immediacy- one can exercise a certain set of skills and be privy to seeing instant resu....

Ophthalmologists can make an early diagnosis of many serious diseases through eye examination: Dr Amod Gupta

 The eye examination is often neglected by primary care physicians. But the fact is eyes act as a diagnostic window, revealing signs of systemic disease before symptoms ap....

This handy, wireless pocket-sized ECG machine can revolutionise cardiac care 

This engineer couple, Neha and Rahul, took up the challenge to make a leadless, portable ECG device themselves....

University of Dundee Research aims to solve Neuropathic Pain mysteries

Researchers at the University of Dundee seek to understand the mechanisms driving neuropathic pain and its intensity in patients, which affects appr....

The two-day SPCTT event will bring together leading experts, researchers, and clinicians in pediatric hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and cellular th...