Home / Houston News / University of Houston powers up futuristic robotic device to help stroke patients

University of Houston powers up futuristic robotic device to help stroke patients

HOUSTON, Texas — Almost 800,000 people in the United States suffer from a stroke annually – and the affliction affects each patient differently. One University of Houston researcher has created a device that greatly improves the lives of patients whose stroke affected motor skills.

UH engineering professor Jose Luis Contreras-Vidal developed a next-generation robotic arm that can be controlled by the user’s brainwaves. The portable device uses a brain-computer interface (BCI) developed by Contreras-Vidal. Stroke patient Oswald Reedus, 66, is the first person to use a device of this kind.

Reedus lost the use of his left arm following a stroke that also caused aphasia, or difficulty speaking. While he’s been able to recover his ability to speak clearly, the new exoskeleton will help rehabilitate his arm.

Check Also

Residents in Lakewood Pines subdivision claim their water is stinky and cloudy

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — Residents of the Lakewood Pines subdivision, just off West Lake Houston Parkway …