Comment Re:Score one for research using monkeys. (Score 2) 50
I've had a chance to be involved in the technical setup of the clinical trial. It is truly fascinating to see the system at work. It will be 8 patients in total by mid-2018, so we'll have to wait until then to see if it truly works.
Restoring walking is a first step because it is also easiest to begin with because walking is largely based on reflexes. These reflex networks are typically preserved after spinal cord injury, but the person is no longer able to activate them voluntarily, thus losing the ability to walk. With electrical stimulation and an extensive rehabilitation program, the aim is that the person regains some of this voluntary control.
Restoring arms and hands function will be the next step. Tasks involving these limbs however, require fine motor control and are less reliant on reflexes. This means that remnant reflexes cannot be exploited and relearning tasks will be much harder (if not impossible...).
My hope is still that one day we can have a paralyzed patient compete in the cybathlon exoskeleton race but with the implanted electrical stimulator instead of an actual exoskeleton.