Asia
Last Updated: Apr 25
News from The O&P EDGE
- Paper Skin Mimics Sensory Functions A team of electrical engineers have demonstrated a scalable “garage” fabrication approach using off-the-shelf, inexpensive household items such as aluminum foil, tape, sticky notes, napkins, and sponges to build paper skin with sensory capabilities.
- Graphene and Gold Make a Better Brain Probe
- Grant Awarded to Test Gene Therapy for CMT
- Yale Student Venture Focused on Amputees Wins Award
- Lower-limb Exoskeleton Features Bio-inspired Knee
- Meta-material Fits Like a Glove
- Mizuno to Build Prosthetic Limbs for Athletes
- Smart Chip Makes Low-Powered, Wireless Implants a Possibility
- Japanese Researchers Regenerate Joints in Amputated Frog Limbs
- Robotic Glove Helps Patients Restore Hand Movements
- Nabtesco & Proteor in USA Opens Office
- Self-Healing Sensor Brings Electronic Skin Closer To Reality
- ISPO Approves Qatar as a Member Society
- Multinational Team Develops BCI for Controlling an Exoskeleton
- Study: Characterizing the O&P Workplace Environment
- Japan to Host ISPO World Congress in 2019
- Patient Fitted With Prosthetic Leg That Can Feel
- Nonprofit Formed to Help Nepal With Post-Earthquake O&P Needs
- Study: Experimental and Computational Analysis of Composite AFOs
- Southeast University, China, Researchers Develop Hip Exoskeleton