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Endovascular BCI for Severe Paralysis: First In-Human Experience with Thomas Oxley, MD, PhD

Tom Oxley from Mount Sinai presents his First in Human Brain Computer Interface data from Synchron's SWITCH trial and shares where the stentrode is going next.

Пікірлер: 2

  • @apriltincher8364
    @apriltincher83642 жыл бұрын

    I was told around December I had the synchron stentrode through my device I had my first mra in 2019 and fluoroscopy during neck surgery in March 2020. I live in Kentucky and would love to speak to someone face to face at first thought I had multiple sclerosis my disease keeps progressing now the symptoms don't come and go like they did after a real bad rectal surgery infection is what started all of that.

  • @rockstar170
    @rockstar1702 жыл бұрын

    Dr. Oxley, incredible achievement, congratulations on your work! Thanks for your passion and contribution to humanity with this technology. I realize this is a single "stentrode" placed in a relatively larger vessel, superior sagittal sinus, and placed over the motor cortex for efferent motor signals. Hypothetically, I'm curious how adaptable this technology would be for the speech centers? Obviously, this would require multiple "sentrodes," in smaller vessels. Could speech data even be decoded and translated in a similar way?

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