Prosthetic Hand Capable of Delivering Texture Sensations 30
Zothecula writes: A new prosthetic system allows amputees to feel familiar sensations and also, somewhat unexpectedly, reduces their phantom pain. Researchers at Case Western Reserve University and the Louis Stokes Cleveland Veterans Affairs Medical Center developed the system to reactivate areas of the brain that produce the sense of touch, but recipients of prosthetic hands reported their phantom pain subsiding almost completely after being hooked up to the system.
Not a medical professional, but: (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Not a medical professional, but: (Score:5, Funny)
Must ... not ... make ... penis ... joke ...
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Prosthetic Hand Capable of Delivering Texture Sensations
...to my penis.
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There's your problem right there: you're not supposed to have a coin in your brain.
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Well, here I'd substitute rational/irrational with 'conscious' and 'primitive'.
You as a human know you are missing your hand (or in the case of your example that your hand isn't really going to get hit)
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Nonetheless I didn't know about this and was happy for the reference.
I think the
Synaethesia in phantom limbs induced with mirrors (1996)
V.S. Ramachandran & D Rogers-Ramachandran
http://chip.ucsd.edu/pdf/Synst... [ucsd.edu]
Phantoms Limbs and Neural Plasticity
V.S. Ramachandran & D Rogers-Ramachandran (2000)
http://www.neurosci [neurosciences.us]
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By documentary, did you mean House MD? :)
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I looked so much that now I think that maybe I'm remembering it wrong. All the same, it'd be better if it were at a 45 degree angle, so that you could simply lo
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"I didnâ(TM)t read the TFA,"
Obviously.
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Nerve mapping? (Score:5, Insightful)
Can anyone here explain to me the issue if/how we can map nerves correctly?
For example: suppose someone's finger gets cut off, and then surgeons manage to reattach it.
I assume that since there are many distinct sensory nerve endings on a finger, each of those must be carried along a distinct electrical pathway up to the brain.
When a surgeon reattaches a finger, does he/she somehow get all of those hundreds(?) of connections to be lined up properly so that the mapping is the same as it was before the accident? If so, how? If not, what happens?
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I think that if you re-attach soon enough, the nerves end up re-mapping to the neurons as your brain sorts out what's what.
Over time, your brain figures out that this particular one doesn't quite match what it used to, and then maps to the one which is there now.
I suspect during the initial period until the nerves sort themselves out, you have really mismatched/clumsy sensation, but over time as the brain and neurons sort everything out it gets better.
Of course, I'll freely admit I have no real understandin
Well duh (Score:5, Insightful)
This seems like one of those things that people might very reasonably not think of ahead of time but which seems blindingly obvious in retrospect. It would probably be expected that if you managed to reattach a severed limb that there wouldn't be any phantom pain afterward. ("Real" pain during the healing process yes, and perhaps lingering aches as one might have with any injury, but not phantom pain.) You'd also expect the same to hold true if you managed to grow a new arm and attach it properly.
But a simple prosthetic isn't enough to prevent or cure phantom pain. So one would expect that at _some_ point in the process between no nerve connections with a peg leg (or equivalent) and full connection with a regrown/reattached limb that the phantom pain would disappear. I guess they just encountered that point earlier than they might have expected.
In hindsight (Score:3)
What if Oracle happens to have patents on the API (Score:2)
You can't even give Larry Ellison the middle finger.
nice (Score:1)