Engineers at Columbia Engineering and Columbia University's Department of Otolaryngology have designed a robotic neck brace that could help doctors evaluate the impact of cancer treatments on neck mobility, and guide patients' recovery.
Columbia Engineering's Sunil K. Agrawal and colleagues upgraded an earlier robotic neck brace developed for analyzing head and neck movements in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
The novel wearable brace was assembled from three-dimensionally-printed materials and inexpensive sensors.
Columbia University's Scott Troob said, "Use of the sensing neck brace allows a surgeon to screen patients postoperatively for movement difficulty, quantify their degree of impairment, and select patients for physical therapy and rehabilitation."
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