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With better, stronger and faster components, the bionic age has finally arrived, says Julian Smith
We have the technology
Five years after he lost a leg to a landmine in Afghanistan, American war veteran Mike McNaughton can run well enough to coach his 11-year-old son’s soccer team. This amazing comeback comes partly from his determination to get back on two feet, but also from a piece of high-tech hardware: a computerised, hydraulic knee that monitors and adjusts every step, with a response time in milliseconds. “Now I can run with the kids full blast and kick the ball around with them,” he says.
After decades of amputees having to make do with designs that had changed little since the second world war, artificial limbs that predict their user’s every movement and look like the real thing are finally breaking out of the lab. Yet convincing and comfortable synthetic limbs like McNaughton’s are only the beginning of the bionic age.
Emerging prosthetic technologies promise not only greater power and flexibility but also pressure-sensitive artificial skin, and even limbs that are bonded to the body and controlled by the mind – and much of this within five years. Rebuilding amputees to be faster and stronger than before is rapidly becoming a realistic possibility. With experimental prosthetics increasingly able to integrate with flesh, bone and the nervous system, the very idea of “losing a limb” may one day become obsolete.
“This is perhaps the most exciting time ever to be involved in advanced prosthetics,” says John Bigelow of the applied physics laboratory at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore,
Bionics researcher and double amputee Hugh Herr, of the MIT Media Lab, aims to merge body and machine
There are many reasons for this bionic gold rush, says Bigelow. Smaller, better components have made it possible to pack more hardware into a limb than ever before. There are also more and more amputees in the US because of soaring rates of diabetes – which can cau
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