
Baugh, as Johns Hopkins’ Applied Physics Laboratory reports,
is the first “bilateral shoulder-level amputee” to wear and control two
modular prosthetic limbs at the same time.
The technology has been in development for more than a decade. It was funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and was tested on Baugh as part of an experimental program run at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory.
The technology has been in development for more than a decade. It was funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and was tested on Baugh as part of an experimental program run at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory.
Though his progress is
groundbreaking, accomplishing this medical first was no easy feat. Baugh
first had to undergo an intense surgery performed by the institute’s
medical director, Albert Chi that rearranged (in medical terms, “reinnervated”) the nerves in his chest.
“I remember when I first came out from under it, the pain,I don’t even remember the original being that much excruciating pain,”Baugh said in a video released by the university.
After the surgery was complete,
the doctors used a 360-degree scanning method to produce a prototype for
a cast to fit around Baugh’s body. This was meant to function as both a
support brace for his new limbs and a platform on which his
reinnervated nerves could make the brain-to-chest nerve connections
required to move.

“Once the training sessions were complete, and they released me and let me be the computer … I just go into a whole different world,” Baugh said.
Baugh
now has access to the areas of motion most people take for granted in
their upper bodies: shoulders, elbows, wrists, hands. Within all these
categories, he can move an amazing 30 degrees altogether. Though this
means he can move cups and balls from one place to another, it’s a
complicated process. He must move each joint into position separately —
for instance, first shoulder, then elbow, then wrist.
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Baugh’s story comes just months after University of Pittsburgh researchers presented a paper on the recent improvements in robotic limbs. Elsewhere, BrainGate is developing a limb that requires a chip to be implanted in a person’s mind, and Duke University scientists premiered a mind-controlled exoskeleton in June at the opening of the World Cup.
“I think we’re just getting started at this point,” Mike McLoughlin,
the prosthetic program manager, said in the video. “It’s like the early
days of the Internet. There’s a tremendous amount of potential ahead of
us. The next five, 10 years are going to bring some really phenomenal
advancements.”
Baugh’s hopes are much more humble:
“Maybe for once I’ll be able to
put change in a pop machine and get the pop out of it,” he said. “Simple
things like that that most people never think of.”
[Via Engadget]
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