"I FELT the ball!" yelled Juliano Pinto as he kicked off the Football
World Cup in Brazil last year.
Pinto, aged 29 at the time, lost the use of his lower body after a car
accident in 2006. "It was the most moving moment," says Miguel Nicolelis
at Duke University in North Carolina, head of the Walk Again Project,
which developed the thought-controlled exoskeleton that enabled Pinto to
make his kick.
Since November 2013, Nicolelis and his
team have been training Pinto and seven other people with similar
injuries to use the exoskeleton – a robotic device that encases the
limbs and converts brain signals into movement.
The device also feeds sensory information
to its wearer, which seems to have partially reawakened their nervous
system. When Nicolelis reassessed his volunteers after a year of
training, he found that all eight people had regained sensations and the
ability to move muscles in their once-paralysed limbs.
"Nobody expected it at all," says Nicolelis, who presented the results at the Brain Forum
in Lausanne, Switzerland, on 31 March. "When we first saw the level of
recovery, there was not a single person in the room with a dry eye."
When a person's spinal cord is injured, the
connection between body and brain can be damaged, leaving them unable to
feel or move parts of their body. If a few spinal nerves remain, people
can sometimes regain control over their limbs, although this can
involve years of rehabilitation.
But the odds of recovery are slashed for
people diagnosed with a complete spinal cord injury, in which the nerves
are thought to be severed. This results in no feeling below the site of
the injury. People can spend a lifetime feeling disconnected from their
lower body, and tend to receive less physical therapy as a result. Just
over a third of the 12,500 people who experience a spinal cord injury
every year in the US have complete injuries.
The Walk Again Project's results suggest
that rehabilitation with an exoskeleton might offer a better future.
Developed by a team of 156 people spanning the globe, the device reads
the wearer's brain activity using an electrode cap. Activity patterns
associated with the wearer's intention to move are translated into an
electrical signal that moves the legs of the exoskeleton, allowing the
person to walk.
The exoskeleton has another important
feature: it provides tactile feedback to the wearer. A flexible bed of
temperature, pressure and proximity sensors – what the team calls an
artificial skin – lines the sole of each foot. When the wearer takes a
step, a signal is relayed to their forearm, which is still able to feel
sensations. "You are driving the exoskeleton by thinking about what you
want to do, and you are getting instantaneous feedback from the surface
on how you're walking and how you're moving in space," says Nicolelis.
Seven of Nicolelis's eight volunteers have
complete spinal cord injuries. At the start of the training, all eight
said they felt disconnected from their lower body, and were unable to
even imagine moving their paralysed body parts. But after 1100 hours of
training, everyone said they felt a sense of ownership over their limbs.
"They felt that they had legs again," says Nicolelis. "They can
actually feel that they are touching the ground and moving their legs."
But what really startled the team was that
everyone showed signs of functional recovery. "In every patient we saw
an improvement in tactile sensation," says Nicolelis. Some people could
feel regions of their body seven vertebrae below their spinal cord
injury, and everyone could voluntarily move muscles in their lower
limbs.
Reactivated nerves
The greatest improvement was in a woman who
had received a complete spinal cord injury 13 years ago. After a year of
training, she could feel sensations below her injury, and, when
supported in a harness, could make leg movements associated with
walking.
While the individuals are still some way
from being able to support their own weight and walk unaided, their
level of improvement is "dumbfounding", says Sukhvinder Kalsi-Ryan,
a physiotherapist at the University Health Network in Toronto, Canada,
who trials therapies for people with spinal cord injuries. "This is the
most extreme recovery I've ever seen," says Kalsi-Ryan. "What Nicolelis
has done is phenomenal – the patients are much closer to normal human
movement." The results are more impressive because they were seen in all
eight people, she adds.
"These are important observations," says Lee Miller,
who is developing thought-controlled prostheses in monkeys at
Northwestern University in Chicago. "But it's important to temper the
excitement with the recognition that it will be a long road before
patients could begin to think of being able to walk independently
again."
No one is sure how tactile feedback is
triggering recovery. "One of the most important factors in
rehabilitation is mimicking normal stimulation," says Kalsi-Ryan. When
nerves and other cells aren't used, they shrink and atrophy. "Things
just stop working," she says. The feedback from the exoskeleton's
artificial skin may trick nerve cells into reactivating and regrowing.
"They have created the closest thing to a human experience," she says.
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