Mind-controlled prosthetic arms that work in daily life are now a reality

Oct 14, 2014

By Chalmers University of Technology

In January 2013 a Swedish arm amputee was the first person in the world to receive a prosthesis with a direct connection to bone, nerves and muscles. An article about this achievement and its long-term stability is now published in the Science Translational Medicine journal.

“Going beyond the lab to allow the patient to face real-world challenges is the main contribution of this work,” says Max Ortiz Catalan, research scientist at Chalmers University of Technology and leading author of the publication.

“We have used osseointegration to create a long-term stable fusion between man and machine, where we have integrated them at different levels. The artificial arm is directly attached to the skeleton, thus providing mechanical stability. Then the human’s biological control system, that is nerves and muscles, is also interfaced to the machine’s control system via neuromuscular electrodes. This creates an intimate union between the body and the machine; between biology and mechatronics.”

The direct skeletal attachment is created by what is known as osseointegration, a technology in limb prostheses pioneered by associate professor Rickard Brånemark and his colleagues at Sahlgrenska University Hospital. Rickard Brånemark led the surgical implantation and collaborated closely with Max Ortiz Catalan and Professor Bo Håkansson at Chalmers University of Technology on this project.


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2 comments on “Mind-controlled prosthetic arms that work in daily life are now a reality

  • 2
    ShadowMind says:

    Looks like only one step is left before full cyborg-ness: two-way communication. Just as the brain is telling the arm where to go, the arm needs to tell the brain where it is, and and sensory data too (pressure, temperature). The future of artificial limbs looks exciting!

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