Friday, December 27, 2013

Stroke victim learns to walk again thanks to £30,000 robotic leg which 'predicts' her movements



Stroke victim Sue Sandars is back on her feet after more than three years – thanks to a revolutionary robotic leg which ‘predicts’ her movements.


Sue,  51, lost nearly all the use of her left arm and leg and was left in a wheelchair following a blood clot in her brain in June 2010.


But thanks to an incredible £30,000 robotic leg – and hours of hard work – she has taken her first steps on the path to ditching her wheelchair for good.


One of just two in the UK, the thigh-high device is controlled by a super-sensitive insole in her trainer, which decodes her intended manoeuvre through tiny initial movements.


The high-tech contraption then instantly moves, doing some of the work needed to help the wearer walk or stand up.


It helps mum-of-two Sue build up her muscles, as well as retraining parts of her brain which were wiped after her stroke.


Sue, of Blockley, Gloucestershire, said: ‘The leg is amazing.  There are little electrodes that go in the insole in my trainer and when I start to move just a tiny bit it stimulates the bionic leg to move, taking away some of the effort needed to walk or stand.


‘It reacts to what I do, almost calibrating how much effort I am doing myself. I’ve only been using it for two or three months but I can notice the difference already.’


Recovery: Sue is put through her paces using her revolutionary robotic leg. (SWNS)

Unaware she was experiencing tell-tale signs of a stroke, Sue had trouble typing on her keyboard the day before her clot fully formed in July 2010.

She put it down to a migraine and took painkillers before driving home, making dinner and heading to bed.



But when she woke up at 2am to go to the bathroom, she smacked her head off the shower door.


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Sue said: ‘My head was banging against the shower cubicle and my hubby woke up and came into see me and realised that my face was dropping.

‘His father had a stroke so he knew what he was looking at.


‘He rang 999 and I could hear him saying I was having a stroke.  I remember thinking ‘that can’t be right – I’m 48, only old people have strokes, how the hell can that be happening to me?”

Sue, 51, has been given a new lease of life thanks to the remarkable machine. (SWNS)

She slipped in and out of consciousness for three days after she was rushed to the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford.


She was transferred to a specialist rehabilitation unit in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, after two weeks, where she spent four months regaining some use of her arm and leg.


Mum Sue has been using the bionic leg at The Gym in Cheltenham for three months.


It has been loaned to personal trainer Dan Fivey by US inventors AlterG, who are keen to get UK feedback on their newest invention.


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Dan said: ‘It helps people walk further, faster and for longer and gives them the confidence and self esteem that they can do it without the bionic leg.

‘They can do activities like squatting, cross training and walking, standing up and sitting down, without falling over and without their walking aids.


‘When they have been walking for ten to 15 minutes with the leg on, when we take the leg off the muscles as switched on.


‘They are ready to go doing that activity again and the brain sort of remembers that muscles needed and how to work without the leg on.’


Sue, who returned to work in telesales in January, added: ‘I can feel the difference already. I’m determined. I’m going to be out of that wheelchair for good sooner or later.’





Stroke victim learns to walk again thanks to £30,000 robotic leg which 'predicts' her movements

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