After a very successful IPO, the CEO of Rewalk will be on CNBC to discuss specifics about the company and how they expect to be profitable. He will be on in a little over an hour. Discussion should be very interesting!
After a very successful IPO, the CEO of Rewalk will be on CNBC to discuss specifics about the company and how they expect to be profitable. He will be on in a little over an hour. Discussion should be very interesting!
Thankyou for letting us all know...im not sure that i can access that network so would you be kind and come and give feedback please dlevy
Interesting segment. Rewalk is the only system FDA approved which means the Veterans Administration will start buying them for therapy. Unfortunately war veterans are making a market for this therapy.
Interesting segment. Rewalk is the only system FDA approved which means the Veterans Administration will start buying them for therapy. Unfortunately war veterans are making a market for this therapy.
of course i can imagine how thats the case dlevy, shame. Do you think then with that in mind it will still have a positive effect the interest in spinal cord injury research etc ?
Interesting segment. Rewalk is the only system FDA approved which means the Veterans Administration will start buying them for therapy. Unfortunately war veterans are making a market for this therapy.
It's good to use for therapy but I hope it doesn't take away focus from actually finding a "cure".
Post by petelanddownunder on Sept 18, 2014 4:33:40 GMT -8
Please forgive me for not reading all of the information available about Rewalk which may have answered this question? Who (what level of sci etc) can benefit from using the Rewalk ?
Please forgive me for not reading all of the information available about Rewalk which may have answered this question? Who (what level of sci etc) can benefit from using the Rewalk ?
Judging by the videos it looks like you have to be a very low level paraplegic with good trunk control and upper body strength to use it effectively.
Might be possible but definitely not practical. I personally would never waste my time & energy trying this thing out but others should for sure try it if they'd like to.
Hello Everyone, I spent four months last fall training with the Re-Walk at the VA in Bronx, N.Y. It is an amazing device. I am a T-10 complete. I have no lower motor Neurons working at all. As dead as you can get. It was great to stand and have a conversation with someone , looking them at eye level. I had a hard time with balance. The rewalk moves on its own and you have to let the machine walk. My mind wanted to force the machine to walk and that is where I ran into some problems. A person who is incomplete and has sensation in their feet would do very well with Re-Walk. Being a complete it is hard to look forward and figure out where your feet are landing. Over time you do get better at re-walk but it is something you take months to master. The guy Radi from Israel, was a T-8 complete. He walked around like he was never injured. He spent two years training with rewalk. It can be done but it does take time. I am glad that I tried it , but hope they can put me back together someday. I would even be satisfied to have bowel and blatter return first. I wish more companies would pour the money into research and nerve regeneration instead of machines. It is not a quick fix. My other concern is the home models. I don't know what someone would do if they fell with Re-Walk. If you fall, you have to move back onto a chair and program the unit to start all over. The functions are on a wrist watch and command a back pack Ipad to the unit. You sit, stand then walk. Pretty simple concept but lots of training. I guess its better than nothing but I personally are not sold on the units for complete injuries. If anyone has questions, feel free to ask. Best Regards, Joe
Hello Everyone, I spent four months last fall training with the Re-Walk at the VA in Bronx, N.Y. It is an amazing device. I am a T-10 complete. I have no lower motor Neurons working at all. As dead as you can get. It was great to stand and have a conversation with someone , looking them at eye level. I had a hard time with balance. The rewalk moves on its own and you have to let the machine walk. My mind wanted to force the machine to walk and that is where I ran into some problems. A person who is incomplete and has sensation in their feet would do very well with Re-Walk. Being a complete it is hard to look forward and figure out where your feet are landing. Over time you do get better at re-walk but it is something you take months to master. The guy Radi from Israel, was a T-8 complete. He walked around like he was never injured. He spent two years training with rewalk. It can be done but it does take time. I am glad that I tried it , but hope they can put me back together someday. I would even be satisfied to have bowel and blatter return first. I wish more companies would pour the money into research and nerve regeneration instead of machines. It is not a quick fix. My other concern is the home models. I don't know what someone would do if they fell with Re-Walk. If you fall, you have to move back onto a chair and program the unit to start all over. The functions are on a wrist watch and command a back pack Ipad to the unit. You sit, stand then walk. Pretty simple concept but lots of training. I guess its better than nothing but I personally are not sold on the units for complete injuries. If anyone has questions, feel free to ask. Best Regards, Joe
joemonte, thankyou for sharing this with us...its pretty amazing! So ideally people need to be accompanied when using the suit? Do you think you would get one for home use and (sorry another question lol) Do you feel the walking helped with any improvements at all?
Hello Laura, Yes, when you have the rewalk on , someone needs to be with you. It is to easy to fall off balance. The unit itself weighs about 40 pounds. I did fall once and you fall hard . The unit is designed to stop if you do start to fall to far front or back. You have two crutches to help stabilize you, but you still can fall. You have to be quick. I will not get one unless Medicare paid for it in full. I use a standing frame glider everyday and get a good work out from that.
The walking did not bring back any function. I was one five who trained with the rewalk and no one regained any functions. Their also was no proof after four months of better bone density either. It probably has a better benefit of the bowels naturally letting the colon work properly. You do have to watch pressure sores with these units. I was leaning a little to far forward and wore the skin off on my tail bone. Took a little while to heal that up. I believe the unit would work the best for stroke patients, MS and someone with a incomplete injury. I don't know for sure but feel they would benefit the best.
Hello Laura, Yes, when you have the rewalk on , someone needs to be with you. It is to easy to fall off balance. The unit itself weighs about 40 pounds. I did fall once and you fall hard . The unit is designed to stop if you do start to fall to far front or back. You have two crutches to help stabilize you, but you still can fall. You have to be quick. I will not get one unless Medicare paid for it in full. I use a standing frame glider everyday and get a good work out from that.
The walking did not bring back any function. I was one five who trained with the rewalk and no one regained any functions. Their also was no proof after four months of better bone density either. It probably has a better benefit of the bowels naturally letting the colon work properly. You do have to watch pressure sores with these units. I was leaning a little to far forward and wore the skin off on my tail bone. Took a little while to heal that up. I believe the unit would work the best for stroke patients, MS and someone with a incomplete injury. I don't know for sure but feel they would benefit the best.
Hmmm thats really interesting, im so pleased you have come and talked about your experience. There is so much talk about the units and they almost looked too good to be true. Im surprised that there was no improvement with bone density...It makes you wonder if standing in these standing frames actually is helping much with this...(slightly off tangent sorry) especially if upright mobility hasnt helped.
The improvement on the bowels is good but it isnt enough of an advantage really is it. It must feel kinda strange walking in one..and as you say, it takes some time to get used to.