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Tube-Shaped Scaffold May Help Nerve Cells Connect to Prosthetics

Explore how mechanical prosthetic limbs could enhance movement and sensory feedback through innovative nerve cell scaffolds.

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What's the News: Engineers and patients dream of mechanical prosthetic limbs that can talk and listen to the brain, moving in response to thought and sending back sensory information. For that dream to become reality, electrodes from the prosthetic have to connect with nearby nerve cells---a tricky proposition, given that nerve cells in an amputated limb won't grow without proper structural support. A new tubular scaffold, described in detail by Technology Review, has tiny grooves that fit bundles of nerve cells, which could provide the support nerves need to interface with a mechanical limb better than current designs. How the Heck:

The scaffold is made of a grooved polymer sheet (think pleated fabric or corrugated cardboard) rolled into a spiral. The resulting channels in the scaffold are just the right size and shape for bundles of nerve cells to grow through.

Those channels do double duty, not just supporting the ...

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