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Medicine Robotics

After 40 Years As a Double Amputee, Man Gains Two Bionic Arms 66

MojoKid writes Les Baugh, a Colorado man who lost both arms in an electrical accident 40 years ago, is looking forward to being able to insert change into a soda machine and retrieving the beverage himself. But thanks to the wonders of science and technology — and Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) — he'll regain some of those functions while making history as the first bilateral shoulder-level amputee to wear and simultaneously control two Modular Prosthetic Limbs (MPLs). "It's a relatively new surgical procedure that reassigns nerves that once controlled the arm and the hand," explained Johns Hopkins Trauma Surgeon Albert Chi, M.D. "By reassigning existing nerves, we can make it possible for people who have had upper-arm amputations to control their prosthetic devices by merely thinking about the action they want to perform."
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After 40 Years As a Double Amputee, Man Gains Two Bionic Arms

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  • by oodaloop ( 1229816 ) on Thursday December 18, 2014 @12:41PM (#48626477)
    This guy!
  • The prosthetics were 3D-printed?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      nope. they are traditional CNC milled aluminum and such. The shoulder servos were the only wonky thing. Put a slimmer servo there and some shrouding, and guy could even wear a shirt with sleeves and thee only immediate thing you would notice is the hands.

      That thing must require a crapton of power though.

      • It looked as though those metal braces were suspending the arms several inches further from his body than necessary. I wonder if I'm seeing it wrong, or if they were perhaps trying to prevent him accidentally ripping out his abdomen with the elbows while learning.

        I don't know about power though - granted it probably wouldn't run all that long off a laptop battery, but a human arm doesn't normally exert all that much power, and human muscle is *far* less efficient (18%-26%) than modern electric motors. I me

  • I lived long enough to see cyber limbs. Now to make them specialized for specific tasks, and have quick release mechanisms.
    • I lived long enough to see cyber limbs. Now to make them specialized for specific tasks, and have quick release mechanisms.

      Two words: cyber penis

    • I lived long enough to see cyber limbs. Now to make them specialized for specific tasks, and have quick release mechanisms.

      No, you're doing it wrong.

      They should dynamically reconfigure. Switch from a hand to a ratchet, become scissors, turn into a hammer or a clamp, or just the big bashing fist.

      All with super cool sound effects.

      Suddenly the amputee is the cool guy at the party, and the women are whispering about what else it can turn into.

  • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Thursday December 18, 2014 @01:29PM (#48626909) Homepage Journal

    Unfortunately, the arms cost $6 Million, and everything he does with them is in slow motion, accompanied by a reverb sound effect.

  • by pushing-robot ( 1037830 ) on Thursday December 18, 2014 @01:44PM (#48627055)

    Nothing like a reminder that you live in the future. [imgur.com]

    I know we've been talking about biomechatronics for decades, but Moore's Law and developments in nanomaterials are making things possible that were the stuff of science fiction just a few years ago. Simply put, we're starting to build amazingly large numbers of amazingly complex structures at amazingly small scales out of amazing materials, amazingly cheap.

    Mind you, that's not new either; biology has been doing that for eons. Yet being able to manufacture it, to mass-produce biological or biocompatible materials like BCIs [wikipedia.org] and prosthetic organs, is a remarkable and wholly new development. I fully expect the next half century will see a medical revolution that rivals the computer revolution of the last.

    • Its human hacking. Pretty soon we could be literally hooking two people's nervous systems up to each other. I can't imagine why, but I bet it happens.
      • by x0 ( 32926 )

        Its human hacking. Pretty soon we could be literally hooking two people's nervous systems up to each other. I can't imagine why, but I bet it happens.

        For the kaiju, obviously...

        m

    • Nothing like a reminder that you live in the future. [imgur.com]

      Hmmm ... is that the now future, the later future, or the past future (which could be now)?

      The now future when you typed that is in the past, so it's the past future. Now the now future is an ever changing thing, and isn't the same now future as when I started typing this.

      The future future we haven't gotten to, but we will, eventually.

      So, I'd say we live in the present, which in the future will be the past. The future now will have a future

    • You thought of DX:HR, I thought of this: http://img4.wikia.nocookie.net... [nocookie.net]

  • by JudgeFurious ( 455868 ) on Thursday December 18, 2014 @02:04PM (#48627253)
    Does he understand that once he learns to control it we're going to expect him to fight crime with it? He's aware of that right?
  • I think this might be the most uplifting story I have yet to read on Slashdot. Way to go JHU-APL!
  • This is my cousin Les. You can't imagine what it is like to see this type of breakthrough for him after 40 years (I was 10 when the accident happened)
    I've seen how amazing Les is and how he gets around and deals with life without his natural arms for most of my life. I've gone dune buggy racing with him driving (he's a crazy driver :-) ) and many other fun things. But to see these videos, I'm just awe struck. Not only is it impressive technology wise, but it's just awe inspiring and brings immense jo

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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