High-tech prosthetics can sense cold and heat pain and can also be controlled by brain consciousness

According to the British "Daily Mail" reported on September 27, a woman in Ohio, USA, had to amputated because she was infected with a raccoon bite last fall. The doctor performed an operation to help her connect the nerve to the prosthetic, so that her prosthetic can be conscious, and can use the prosthetic finger according to the brain consciousness.

According to reports, the woman became the first amputee to feel hot and cold, stress and pain through the prosthetic, and can move her fingers as the brain wants.

When Melissa Loomis, a 43-year-old Ohio woman, was bitten by a raccoon last fall, it didn't seem serious, but the wound was infected with a threat to life. She was frustrated and worried about her death.

High-tech prosthetics can sense cold and heat pain and can also be controlled by brain consciousness

But her doctor Ajay Seth gave her a chance. Seth moved her to an orthopaedic surgery that she had never had before in the United States, connecting Rum's nerves to the prosthetic limbs so that she could directly manipulate the prosthetic limbs through the brain.

High-tech prosthetics can sense cold and heat pain and can also be controlled by brain consciousness

Experts praised the operation as "revolutionary" and said that Rum has become "the most advanced amputee in the world."

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