Standing and Walking

What is it about standing and walking?! We all take it for granted until it’s taken away; like most things, I suppose.  Most of us do it all day long, on autopilot, without thinking twice or paying any attention.  Phrases and sayings about standing and walking are even embedded in our society.

I hear the most amazing words from Ekso™ users and I see the most amazing smiles from them.  I feel like Santa, but the gift doesn’t come in a box. I feel like a labor and delivery nurse, but there is no baby.  I feel like a superhero, but there’s no cape or special power.

People describe being in Ekso in many different ways.  “I feel like a king.”  “I can give a more intimate hug.”  “I can have a conversation eye to eye.”  “I can remember how tall I am.” “I can look down on someone rather than them looking down on me.”  That is just the beginning of the descriptions I hear.

I can’t imagine the emotional storm that arises for people as they stand and walk.  And, yes, some have used braces and some have standing frames, so maybe it’s not the first time, but there is something magical about emulating human gait. Some say it reminds them of a time before their injury.  Some say it allows them to relinquish a little bit of control and feel a different kind of freedom.  It’s not the same as the way they walked before, but it’s the opportunity to participate in an experience pretty close to it.  I feel incredibly honored to be part of this opportunity.  Like I said, it’s like being a labor and delivery nurse — being part of this powerful experience.  It really doesn’t get old.  Every person has a unique and amazing smile that’s worth a thousand words, some have tears, or sometimes it’s their family members.  Then, I have tears too.  It’s nearly impossible not to be jolted into an emotional state.  I can’t and won’t pretend to know what the user is feeling, but all I know is it sheds some light on the simple things in life that may not cross our minds that often.  These things may mean a lot to some and a little to others.  Either way, it makes me happy to have met so many independent and inspiring Ekso users and to share the experience with them and others in the future.

 

INC’s Cover Story: “5 Big Ideas for the Next 15 Years”

By Eythor Bender, Ekso Bionics’ CEO

We were featured in a thought-provoking cover story in INC’s November 2012 issue that maintains that Ekso Bionics is one of “5 Big Ideas for the Next 15 Years” that have passed its Audacity Test. Read More +

EKSO BIONICS WINS A 2012 WORLD TECHNOLOGY AWARD AND IS HUMBLED …

2012 World Technology Award

By Eythor Bender, Ekso Bionics’ CEO

It was as much a privilege as a technological leap forward to create Ekso, the bionic suit which powers up people with spinal cord injuries or pathologies and gets them walking again.  The 2012 World Technology Award we won on Thursday in the Health and Medicine (Corporate) category has reminded us that we are playing a part in changing life as we know it. This year’s Awards theme hit the nail on the head: “Nothing will ever be the same again.” Read More +

Gary Karp Blogs for Ekso Bionics: Disability Pride

When you first acquire a disability, it’s just not possible to imagine adopting the identity of disability with pride. In the beginning, identifying with disability at all is deeply infused with stigma. In the beginning there is only loss. There is nothing to take pride in, only the deeply uncertain mire of coping with a primal sense of trauma, and a vision of the future that has gone dark. Of course people resist it — at first. Read More +

MOMENTUM

By Eythor Bender, Ekso Bionics™ CEO

As of this writing, our Ekso™ bionic suit is available at 20 respected rehabilitation centers in the United States and Europe. This means that hundreds of people with spinal cord injuries have the opportunity to stand up and walk in Ekso.

That’s quick work for a product that just began shipping in February of this year, and we intend to expand this Ekso™ Center network across the globe in the coming months. You can locate a center near you and follow our progress here.

Over 300 people have stood and walked in Ekso already, taking over 400,000 steps in total.

EKSO™ FOUND TO BE SAFE

By Eythor Bender, Ekso Bionics™ CEO 

It’s been busy, and getting even busier, but every day we are rewarded with new developments that energize and motivate us.

London hosted the International Spinal Cord Society´s (ISCoS) annual scientific meeting in parallel with the Paralympic Games this summer, inspiring participants at both events to break down barriers and refuse to accept the status quo when it comes to defining what people with spinal cord injuries can and can´t do.

Leading minds in the field of spinal cord injury learned the results from a pilot study conducted by Stephanie Kolakowsky-Hayner, PhD, Director of Rehabilitation Research at California’s Santa Clara Valley Medical Center on the safety of Ekso. A copy of the poster can be downloaded here and a copy of her PVA presentation can be downloaded here.

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Gary Karp Blogs for Ekso Bionics: The Problem Ekso Won’t Solve

I’m about to write about another thing that the Ekso doesn’t do for people with paralysis.

But first, a couple of disclaimers.

I remain a big a fan of Ekso Bionics, and a total supporter of their effort to develop this technology. If you’ve been following my monthly blogs then hopefully you already know that. (If you haven’t kept up, go back and read the earlier blogs; it’s good stuff.) They’ve kept a (pretty good) perspective on who people with paralysis really are, and the quality of lives they are capable of living. They get that once people get over the initial emotional rush of standing and walking, the Ekso will have to meet the test of daily practicability. Read More +

New Levels of Autonomy for Patients Wearing Upgraded Bionic Walking Suit “Ekso”

Plus New Ways to Understand and Share Your Progress

 

RICHMOND, California, August 9, 2012 – Ekso Bionics today announced that it has begun shipping an upgraded version of Ekso™, the bionic suit that powers patients with spinal cord injuries and pathologies up to get them standing up and walking again. Each Ekso now comes equipped with three new walking modes for progressive rehabilitation options, in addition to EksoPulse™, a wireless networked usage monitor. Patients will have new challenges as they master each level and more control of the suit as they become more adept. Also, Ekso now provides both the patient and the physical therapist with better insights into that patient’s headway.

Ekso is a ready-to-wear, battery-powered bionic suit – or exoskeleton – that is strapped over the user’s clothing. The device transfers its 45 lb. load directly to the ground, so the patient doesn’t bear the weight. Each Ekso can be adjusted in a few minutes to fit most people weighing 220 pounds or less, and between 5’2” and 6’2”, with at least partial upper body strength. The patient provides the balance and proper body positioning, and Ekso facilitates walking over ground with reciprocal gait.

“With this upgrade, clinicians using Ekso can now empower their patients even more by teaching them to control the suit autonomously, thereby giving them greater independence,” said Eythor Bender, Ekso Bionics’ CEO.

“As the patient gains confidence and familiarity with walking, Ekso now permits them to graduate to a next level, and then another,” explained Darrell Musick, clinical director at Ekso Bionics. “This comfortable experience-based progression allows for sequentially- increased freedom and better control. The patients love it.”

Ekso’s Three New Walking Modes: 

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Gary Karp Blogs for Ekso Bionics: Our Legs Do So Many Things

Legs do way more than walking.

All of this talk about robotics and walking got me to thinking about what else we do with our legs. When you take a minute to think about it, as it turns out, it’s a lot.

How extra cool would Ekso be if it could be programmed to do all this other stuff I can’t do with my legs as long as they happen to be out of contact with my brain? Such as… Read More +

Gary Karp Blogs for Ekso Bionics: Not An Option — For Now

I can’t use the Ekso.

Not at the moment, at least. Someday I might be able to. It’s an open question. My ability to walk with the Ekso might prove impossible, but even if it’s possible, it’s going to take a grueling process for me to get there.

There are two issues. The first is bone density. Read More +