Ekso, robotic exoskeleton, to allow paralyzed woman to walk again
Windsor, N.S., clinic hoping to raise $80K to purchase Ekso Robotic Exoskeleton
A Windsor, N.S., family is hoping to see their daughter walk again thanks to a high-tech bionic suit,something that would have seemed impossible only years ago.
It was Boxing Day 2009, when Amy Paradiswas in a car crash that left her paralyzed.
It has been a long road to recovery ever since.
I've gained a lot more independence and obviously, more muscle, that I was told I was never going to get, she said.
The doctors told Paradis she would never walk again, but thanks to a bionic exoskeleton suit made by Ekso Bionics, she believes she will.
Ekso is a wearable exoskeleton that fits over a persons clothes. Battery-powered motors drive the legs and crutches help the user balance.
Walking is achieved as the users weight shifts, which activates sensors in the suit to promptforward steps.
It will literally enable her to walk again it will retrain the body how to go through the motions, and over time her leg muscles will get stronger. We need this, said Marki Wong, Paradiss trainer on their GoFundMe website.
Paradis said it would change her life.
"Just regaining more independence and ability and to show people that nothing is impossible," she said.
After her injury, Paradis and her mother started a spinal cord injury recovery centre in Windsor called Footprints. They're fundraising online to raise $80,000 to buy the suit, which would be kept at the centrefor all clients to use.
Theyre attempting to raise $12,000 by Friday for the down payment. In the meantime, they willleasethe suit from the company.
The effort has even caught the attention of Springhill singer Anne Murray, who tweeted a link to the fundraising page.
"We want to move forward and this is why this is something that's very beneficial, very, very beneficial to the spinal-cord-injured community," said Belliveau.
The suit should arrive sometime in April. The centre will be the third in Canada to have one.