While this is very interesting most people are going to read too much into the ability to help stroke survivors. This is only going to be helpful for those strokes that leave the motor and premotor cortex intact. Mainly damage to the white matter which your doctor has no clue about how to objectively determine that damage. This wouldn't help me at all unless the initiation connection point would be in my executive control area.
http://www.mdtmag.com/news/2015/12/implant-could-bridge-lost-brain-connections-reanimate-paralyzed-limbs?
In
the next decade, people who have suffered a spinal cord injury or
stroke could have their mobility improved or even restored through a
radically new technology: implantable devices that can send signals
between regions of the brain or nervous system that have been
disconnected due to injury.
That's the mission driving the Center for Sensorimotor Neural
Engineering, a University of Washington-led effort that includes
researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, San Diego
State University and other partners.
To support development of this much-needed technology, the National
Science Foundation recently renewed the center's funding. It has awarded
$16 million over the next four years to support research on implantable
devices that promote brain plasticity and reanimate paralyzed limbs.
"There's a huge unmet need, especially with an aging population of
baby boomers, for developing the next generation of medical devices for
helping people with progressive or traumatic neurological conditions
such as stroke and spinal cord injury," said CSNE director and UW
professor of computer science and engineering Rajesh Rao.
The goal is to achieve proof-of-concept demonstrations in humans
within the next five years, Rao said. This will lay the groundwork for
eventual clinical devices approved by the Food and Drug Administration,
in collaboration with the center's industry partners.
CSNE was founded in 2011 with an $18.5 million NSF grant. Since then,
its interdisciplinary team of neuroscientists, engineers, computer
scientists, neurosurgeons, ethicists and industry partners has led the
way in developing 'bi-directional' implantable devices that can both
pick up brain signals and send information to other parts of the nervous
system.
The devices record and decode electrical signals generated by the
brain when a person forms an intention, for example, to move a hand to
pick up a cup. The devices are also able to wirelessly transmit that
information, essentially creating a new artificial pathway around
damaged areas of the brain or nervous system.
"When Christopher Reeve sustained a spinal cord injury due to a fall
from his horse, his brain circuits were still intact and able to form
the intention to move, but unfortunately the injury prevented that
intention from being conveyed to the spinal cord," Rao said.
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