Video: Israeli Super-Suit Lets Disabled Walk
By Tactical Operations • Aug 26th, 2008 • Category: Crime and Terror News
Super-strength suits aren't just for soldiers or comic book heroes. Doctors and researchers from around the world see exoskeletons as a way to help the elderly and the disabled regain lost abilities.
In Israel, engineer Amit Goffer has designed an exoskeleton that lets paralyzed people walk and climb stairs, with crutches. It's clearly not as sophisticated as some of the super-suits being developed for military purposes. But the ReWalk system -- now in clinical trials in Tel Aviv's Sheba Medical Center -- does offer a chance for a much more normal life. According to this clip from InfoLive.tv, it "consists of motorized leg supports, body sensors and a
backpack containing a computerized control box and rechargeable
batteries. The user picks a setting with a remote control wrist band -
stand, sit, walk, descend or climb - and then leans forward, activating
the body sensors and setting the robotic legs in motion."
ReWalk's inventor, Goffer, is "himself was paralyzed in an accident in 1997, but he cannot use his own invention because he does not have full function of his arms." Maybe that will change, with exoskeleton 2.0.
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