A woman has become the first
Italian to have a bionic hand fitted, sources said on Thursday.
The hand, built by Silvestro Micera's team from the Scuola
Superiore Sant'Anna in Pisa and the Polytechnic of Lausanna, was
fitted in June 2016 at Rome's Policlinico Gemelli Hospital by
neurosurgeon Paolo Maria Rossini's team.
The results of trials with the hand are set to be published
in an international scientific journal.
The hand perceives contact with objects.
The hand was fitted in the six-month-long experiment to
Almerina Mascarello, who lives in Veneto and had lost her hand
in an accident.
"The hand is an improved version of the one fitted onto a
Danish man in 2014," Micera told ANSA.
Mascarello is also the first woman who has been able to get
out and about with her hi-tech hand because now, unlike in 2014,
all the necessary electronic equipment has been put into a
backpack.
This, Micera explained, "includes the system that registers
the movement of the muscles and translates them into electrical
signals, which are then turned into a set of commands for the
bionic hand.
"Another system transforms the information registered by the
sensors in the hand in signals to send to nerves and therefore
into sensorial information".
The woman took along the backpack on a foray in Rome in
October 2016, under the watchful eyes of the Italian research
team, Micera said.
The ultimate goal, Micera said, is to make the technology
clinically usable.
The backpack was an intermediate step along the way to this
goal, he said.
"The next step is to miniaturise the electronics," said the
lead researcher.
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