its heeeeeerrrrrre...

From: Spike Jones (spike66@ibm.net)
Date: Mon Dec 06 1999 - 20:47:13 MST


Wicked cool! Check this! spike

o Overcoming Paralysis: A computerized implant helps move a paralyzed
arm...

http://www.ivanhoe.com/stream/overcomingparalysis.html

                          Spinal cord injuries are often caused by car
accidents or bad falls.
                          They can happen in a split second, yet the
paralysis these injuries
                          cause can last a lifetime. At least, that's
the way it used to be.

                          Eating out is much more than a treat for
22-year-old Shawn Reed
                          and his fiancée, Kim Faust. It's a triumph.
Shawn says, "We get
                          along good. I think we're gonna have a good
life together."

                          Two years ago, Shawn was left paralyzed from
the chest down
   after a car accident. Most people thought he'd never use his hands
again. They were wrong. He
   can use his right hand today with the help of a computerized device
inside his arm. It's called the
   "NeuroControl Freehand System."

   David Ruch, M.D., a hand surgeon at Wake Forest University Baptist
Medical Center in
   Winston-Salem, N.C., says, "It takes someone who has no use in their
upper extremities -- they
   can't care for themselves, they can't comb their hair, they can't
feed themselves -- and gives them
   independence."

   Surgeons at Wake Forest attached computer-controlled
   electrodes to eight of Shawn's arm muscles. The electrodes make
   the muscles contract so his hand can open and close. Shawn
   activates the electrodes by moving his left shoulder. Weekly visits
   to a hospital therapist help fine tune his movements.

                          "I'm just gonna see if I'm gonna let it
                          beat me or I'm gonna beat it, and I
                          feel like I'm beating it," says Shawn.
Mastering the Freehand does
                          take patience and determination. Shawn has
both.

                          The Freehand is used by about 150 people
worldwide. Right now,
                          it's FDA-approved for paralyzed people who can
still move their
                          shoulders. Dr. Ruch predicts it will
eventually be approved for use
   in people who can only move their necks or mouths, like Christopher
Reeve, and that one day it
   will be used in the legs.

   If you would like more information, please contact:

        NeuroControl Corporation
        (888) 333-4918



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