A brain implant helped a man with paralysis walk more naturally
Restoring a communication link between the brain and spine enables more control over movement
A biking accident left 40-year-old Gert-Jan paralyzed by a spinal cord injury. Here, he and a researcher put a brain-spine interface that has restored some of his ability to walk through its paces.
A system that restores communication between the brain and spine has enabled a man paralyzed by a spinal cord injury to regain near-natural walking ability.
Once the patient’s brain activity was decoded, the brain-spine interface took mere minutes to calibrate, after which the man reported natural-feeling control over movements. He still needs crutches but can easily navigate ramps and steps, surpassing gains from previous treatments.
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