The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Artificial hand helps amputees feel

- By Lauran Neergaard

A next-generation artificial hand is letting two amputees tell the difference between a soft or firm touch.

WASHINGTON >> A next-generation artificial hand is letting two amputees tell the difference between a soft or firm touch — like holding a child without squeezing too tightly. It’s another step toward developing prosthetic­s that can feel.

Implanted electrodes allowed the men to feel the same intensity of pressure in the artificial hand as they could in their other hand, scientists at Case Western Reserve University reported Wednesday.

To Keith Vonderhuev­el, testing the experiment­al device meant finally cradling his 2-year-old granddaugh­ter without first taking off his artificial hand for fear of hurting her.

“Just to be able to touch and feel, it’s an amazing thing,” said Vonderhuev­el, of Sidney, Ohio, who lost his right arm below the elbow 11 years ago in a job accident. “It feels like a light pressure. The harder I squeeze, the stronger that pressure gets.”

And while enhancing prosthetic­s with a sense of touch will take lots more research, the Case Western team is beginning the next big step: Vonderhuev­el and a second volunteer can use the experiment­al hand at home, not just the laboratory, to start learning if it makes a difference in everyday life.

Vonderhuev­el cooks with it in place of his usual prosthetic, more comfortabl­e that he won’t crush an egg or the bread he’s buttering.

Getting to the point where users respond as they would to a normal limb is key “to moving toward truly creating a replacemen­t for the hand,” said Case Western biomedical engineer Dustin Tyler, who leads the project.

Normally when people reach for something, the hand automatica­lly grasps with just enough force to hang on. Nerves in the skin fire rapid messages to the brain so the muscles immediatel­y squeeze tighter or loosen up.

But users of prosthetic hands don’t have that intuitive control. Instead they have to judge every motion by eye so they don’t crush or drop something, difficult even with practice. That’s why many hesitate over shaking hands or holding something delicate.

Lots of work is under way to add a sense of touch. Earlier this month, researcher­s at the University of Pittsburgh reported harnessing brain waves to help a paralyzed man not only move a robotic arm with his thoughts but, in a first, to feel pressure in his own motionless fingers when the artificial ones were touched. Electrodes implanted in the part of his brain that controls hand sensation made it happen.

For amputees, key nerves that once controlled the hand still remain in the stump of the missing limb. Two years ago, Case Western researcher­s wired those nerves to a prosthetic outfitted with sensors that let Vonderhuev­el and fellow volunteer Igor Spetic of Madison, Ohio, sense different textures. When the prosthetic sensors were touched, they activated a portable stimulator that sent electrical signals to the nerves, which detected textures like a cotton ball or sandpaper.

Wednesday’s study, published in Science Translatio­nal Medicine, went further: How to stimulate the intensity of touch?

Scientists didn’t know exactly how nerves fire in response to pressure, necessary for recreating the sensation with electrodes. But in a series of experiment­s, the team from Case Western and the University of Chicago learned how the number and frequency of nerve fiber stimulatio­ns adjust with different amounts of pressure.

“Our stimulatio­n is as sensitive as your real hand,” Tyler said. He’s been gratified to feel Vonderhuev­el change from “the wet-fish handshake to the solid I’m-interactin­g-withyou handshake. There is so much informatio­n in the subtleties of touch.”

Learning how stimulatio­n can produce more realistic sensations is a key step, said University of Pittsburgh rehabilita­tion specialist Robert Gaunt, who wasn’t involved in Wednesday’s work but is part of a team developing similar technology for the paralyzed.

But he’s especially intrigued by how the touchenabl­ed hand will fare in at-home use.

“This is an absolutely crucial step for making systems that really work,” Gaunt said, noting there are scenarios a lab can never replicate.

“Home use will provide an opportunit­y to really see the benefit of sensation.”

 ?? JAMES VONDERHUEV­EL VIA AP ?? In this photo provided by James Vonderhuev­el, Keith Vonderhuev­el picks up 2-year-old Allison Vonderhuev­el in Sidney, Ohio, using a special prosthetic hand that allowed him to feel sensation so he knew how tightly to squeeze. A next-generation...
JAMES VONDERHUEV­EL VIA AP In this photo provided by James Vonderhuev­el, Keith Vonderhuev­el picks up 2-year-old Allison Vonderhuev­el in Sidney, Ohio, using a special prosthetic hand that allowed him to feel sensation so he knew how tightly to squeeze. A next-generation...

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