Paralyzed Man Walks Using Brain Power
Education

Paralyzed Man Walks Using Brain Power


We have seen how paralyzed men or women look like.They can not walk or even they can not make any movements .They use some in supportive instruments to go here and there.
But Now scientists and doctors have done their best to make easier for paralyzed people.
Using an EEG, virtual reality, and physical therapy, researchers at UC Irvine helped a paraplegic man walk again.
 
A paraplegic man has been able to walk again using the power of his brain alone. The patient, who had been paralyzed for five years following a spinal cord injury, is the first with such injuries ever to walk without the need for prosthetic limbs or walking aids. Researchers believe that this is a vital first step in demonstrating that direct brain control can reverse the effects of complete paralysis and restore function into a person’s limbs.
Using an electroencephalogram (EEG)—a non-invasive test which detects electrical activity in the brain—researchers at the University of California, Irvine were able to monitor signals as they passed to electrodes placed on the patient’s knees. For 19 weeks, he underwent training sessions while suspended 5cm above the ground in order to enable free motion of the legs, before walking a 3.66m course on terra firma.
“Even after years of paralysis the brain can still generate robust brain waves that can be harnessed to enable basic walking,” explained Dr. An Do, one of the study’s lead researchers. “We showed that you can restore intuitive, brain-controlled walking after a complete spinal cord injury. This noninvasive system for leg muscle stimulation is a promising method and is an advance of our current brain-controlled systems that use virtual reality or a robotic exoskeleton.”
In reintroducing the concept of walking to the brain, virtual reality mental training was employed, whereby the patient was able to control the movements of an avatar. Physical training was also required in order to strengthen and recondition his leg muscles.
While the field of prosthetics is advancing at a rapid rate, the news that the hundreds of thousands of paraplegics in the U.S might be able to regain spinal cord function is a life-changing prospect. Though the procedure has only been carried out on one patient and is still under review, the proof-of-concept study could affect paralyzed people the world over, and cut down on numerous diseases caused by excessive wheelchair reliance such as pressure ulcers and heart disease.
The study team are now examining the prospect of creating brain implants to mirror the effects of their work as a means of removing the need for a patient to wear an EEG cap and its accompanying equipment.
“Once we’ve confirmed the usability of this noninvasive system, we can look into invasive means, such as brain implants,” said senior lead researcher Dr. Zoran Nenadic. “We hope that an implant could achieve an even greater level of prosthesis control because brain waves are recorded with higher quality. In addition, such an implant could deliver sensation back to the brain, enabling the user to feel their legs.”




- Some Strangest Medical Conditions
Here are some of the most bizarre medical conditions on the planet. They’re tough to live with, but luckily they are very uncommon. The odds of being diagnosed with one of these rare conditions are very slim.     1.Nail-Patella Syndrome Those...

- Strange Facts About Albert Einstein
Strange Facts You Didn’t Know about Albert Einstein 1. Einstein was supposedly slow to talk As a child, Einstein seldom spoke. When he did, he spoke very slowly - indeed, he tried out entire sentences in his head (or muttered them under his breath)...

- Frog Dissection
Background: As members of the class Amphibia, frogs may live some of their adult lives on land, but they must return to water to reproduce. Eggs are laid and fertilized in water. On the outside of the frog’s head are two external nares, or nostrils;...

- Andrew Victor Schally
Andrew Victor Schally, the Polish American biochemist who won the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1977 for his discoveries concerning the peptide hormone production of the brain. Andrew Schally was a co-founder of the field of neuroendocrinology, the study...

- Adrian, Edgar Douglas
British neurologist and neurophysiologist, who established the ‘all-or-none’ character of the propagated nervous impulse earned him the Nobel Price for Physiology or Medicine in 1932. He was a pioneer in recording bioelectrical events in the nervous...



Education








.