News

VIDEO: Bionic exoskeleton helps paralyzed patients walk


 

AT HIMSS14

ORLANDO – It’s a bionic suit, a battery-powered exoskeleton, or as Chris Tagatac calls it, a wearable robot.

Mr. Tagatac, who is paralyzed from the lower ribs down, demonstrated the computer- and battery-operated Ekso Bionics suit at the annual meeting of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, and he spoke with us about his experience. Watch the video to learn more about him and the technology.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

On Twitter @aliciaault

On Twitter @naseemsmiller

Recommended Reading

DTI detects long-term axonal injury in veterans with TBI
MDedge Neurology
Pediatric epilepsy surgery improved mood, behavior in some patients
MDedge Neurology
NIH announces major funding support for concussion, TBI research
MDedge Neurology
TBI survivors see threefold risk of early death
MDedge Neurology
Memory fares better with laser ablation for epilepsy than with surgery
MDedge Neurology
Regionalized trauma care boosts TBI survival
MDedge Neurology
Elementary, middle school athletes may lack concussion risk awareness
MDedge Neurology
Postconcussion discharge compliance checkered in kids
MDedge Neurology
Vasodilator cocktail beats single-agent infusion for subarachnoid hemorrhage vasospasm
MDedge Neurology
Vision test has additive effect on concussion detection in athletes
MDedge Neurology