OANDP-L
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
The O&P EDGE
  • PECOS
  • Magazine
    • Subscription
    • Current Issue
    • Issue Archive
    • News Archive
    • Product & Service Directory
    • Advertising Information
    • EDGE Flipbooks
  • O&P Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
  • EDGE Advantage
    • EA Homepage
    • EA Data
  • O&P Facilities
  • Resources
    • Product & Service Directory
    • Calendar
    • Contact
    • About Us
    • O&P Library
    • The Guide
    • Custom Publications
    • Advertising Information
    • EDGE Direct
    • Amplitude Media Group
  • PECOS
  • Magazine
    • Subscription
    • Current Issue
    • Issue Archive
    • News Archive
    • Product & Service Directory
    • Advertising Information
    • EDGE Flipbooks
  • O&P Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
  • EDGE Advantage
    • EA Homepage
    • EA Data
  • O&P Facilities
  • Resources
    • Product & Service Directory
    • Calendar
    • Contact
    • About Us
    • O&P Library
    • The Guide
    • Custom Publications
    • Advertising Information
    • EDGE Direct
    • Amplitude Media Group
No Result
View All Result
The O&P EDGE Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home News

VR Eases Phantom Limb Pain

by The O&P EDGE
June 7, 2017
in News
0
SHARES
13
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By using virtual reality (VR) it is possible to create a simulated experience of being present in a 3D world where one can move around freely and touch and interact with objects. A new test devised by researchers at Aalborg University (AAU), Denmark, shows that VR technology can trick a person’s brain into thinking that it is still in control of a missing limb and thus can ease phantom limb pain.

 

A subject tests AAU’s VR method to relieve phantom limb pain at the China Rehabilitation Research Center. Photograph courtesy of Geng.

 

“The tactile representation of different body parts are arranged in the brain in a sort of map,” explained Bo Geng, PhD, with the AAU faculty of medicine. “If the brain no longer receives feedback from an area, it tries to reprogram its signal reception map. That is the most common conception of how phantom limb pain occurs.”

Tests have shown that phantom limb pain can be relieved if the brain is tricked into thinking that the amputated limb is still attached to the body. A mirror placed at an angle in front of the chest of a person with an upper-limb amputation can create the visual illusion that the body is symmetrical. If the person then pretends to do the same movements simultaneously with both hands, in many cases the brain can be convinced that it is in contact with an amputated hand. The method has proven effective in numerous people with amputations and is the foundation for a new method that has been developed by Geng in collaboration with Martin Kraus, Dr. rer. nat. in computer science, and master’s degree students Bartal Henriksen and Ronni Nedergaard Nielsen from the medialogy program at Aalborg University.

In the new method, the patient wears VR goggles and a glove on the intact hand, and small electrodes are placed on the residual limb. By stimulating the residual limb with tiny electrical impulses, researchers try to re-create the sensation of the phantom hand. The patient plays different VR games that involve doing the same thing with both hands, such as grabbing a pole that has to be twisted into different shapes or pushing virtual buttons. In VR, the patient feels as if he or she is using both hands.

“Even though a person who has had a hand amputated can no longer see it, in many cases he or she can still feel it. This sensory conflict may be interpreted by the brain as pain. With this new method, we try to overcome that conflict by providing an artificial visual and tactile feedback and in that way suppress the pain,” said Geng.

The new approach underwent its first clinical test at the China Rehabilitation Research Center, Beijing, last fall. Two of three test subjects reported that they felt their phantom limb pain ease, and the third subject experienced a decrease in the frequency of phantom limb pain attacks.

“Of course, we need to do more tests, but the results so far look promising,” Geng said.

Students at AAU are developing a version of the system for people who have lower-limb amputations.

Editor’s note: This story was adapted from materials provided by AAU and ScienceDaily.

Related posts:

  1. Phantom Pain Is No Phantom
  2. Phantom Limb Pain and Low Vision
  3. Losses Beyond the Limb
  4. Examining the Uses of Virtual Reality in Prosthetic Rehabilitation
Previous Post

Cancer Trials Save Millions of Years of Life

Next Post

Freedom Innovations Unveils Technology Institute

Next Post

Freedom Innovations Unveils Technology Institute

 SUBSCRIBE FOR FREE

 

Get unlimited access!

Join EDGE ADVANTAGE and unlock The O&P EDGE's vast library of archived content.
SUBSCRIBE TODAY

O&P JOBS

Eastern

Certified Orthotist (Per Diem – Potential Full Time)

Eastern

Exciting Opportunity!

Eastern

CPO Wanted

Linkedin X-twitter Facebook
The O&P EDGE Magazine
 
Required 'Candidate' login to applying this job. Click here to logout And try again
 

Login to your account

  • Forgot Password?

Reset Password

  • Already have an account? Login

Enter the username or e-mail you used in your profile. A password reset link will be sent to you by email.

Close
No Result
View All Result
  • PECOS
  • MAGAZINE
    • SUBSCRIBE
    • CURRENT ISSUE
    • ISSUE ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ARCHIVE
    • PRODUCTS & SERVICES DIRECTORY
    • ADVERTISING INFORMATION
  • O&P JOBS
    • FIND A JOB
    • POST A JOB
  • EDGE ADVANTAGE
    • EA Homepage
    • EA Data
  • FACILITIES
  • RESOURCES
    • PRODUCTS & SERVICES DIRECTORY
    • CALENDAR
    • CONTACT
    • ABOUT US
    • O&P LIBRARY
    • THE GUIDE
    • CUSTOM PUBLICATIONS
    • ADVERTISING INFORMATION
    • EDGE DIRECT
    • AMPLITUDE
  • OANDP-L
  • LOGIN

© 2025 The O&P EDGE

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
 

Account Activation

Before you can login, you must activate your account with the code sent to your email address. If you did not receive this email, please check your junk/spam folder. Click here to resend the activation email. If you entered an incorrect email address, you will need to re-register with the correct email address.

 

© 2024 The O&P EDGE

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • EDGE Advantage
  • OANDP-L
  • Subscribe

CONTACT US

866-613-0257

info@opedge.com

201 E. 4th St.
Loveland, CO 80537

The most important industry news and events delivered directly to your inbox every week.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • EDGE Advantage
  • OANDP-L
  • Subscribe

© 2025 The O&P EDGE

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
The O&P EDGE Magazine
 
Required 'Candidate' login to applying this job. Click here to logout And try again
 

Login to your account

  • Forgot Password?

Reset Password

  • Already have an account? Login

Enter the username or e-mail you used in your profile. A password reset link will be sent to you by email.

Close
No Result
View All Result
  • PECOS
  • MAGAZINE
    • SUBSCRIBE
    • CURRENT ISSUE
    • ISSUE ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ARCHIVE
    • PRODUCTS & SERVICES DIRECTORY
    • ADVERTISING INFORMATION
  • O&P JOBS
    • FIND A JOB
    • POST A JOB
  • EDGE ADVANTAGE
    • EA Homepage
    • EA Data
  • FACILITIES
  • RESOURCES
    • PRODUCTS & SERVICES DIRECTORY
    • CALENDAR
    • CONTACT
    • ABOUT US
    • O&P LIBRARY
    • THE GUIDE
    • CUSTOM PUBLICATIONS
    • ADVERTISING INFORMATION
    • EDGE DIRECT
    • AMPLITUDE
  • OANDP-L
  • LOGIN

© 2025 The O&P EDGE

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
 

Account Activation

Before you can login, you must activate your account with the code sent to your email address. If you did not receive this email, please check your junk/spam folder. Click here to resend the activation email. If you entered an incorrect email address, you will need to re-register with the correct email address.