Following the breakthroughs in prosthetics | 60 Minutes

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  • Опубликовано: 25 мар 2023
  • Scott Pelley has been tracking advancements in prosthetics for 60 Minutes since 2009.
    #60Minutes #News #Prosthetics
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Комментарии • 443

  • @allshookup1640
    @allshookup1640 Год назад +56

    When I was in kindergarten, my principal lost his hand and forearm in an accident. He was gone for a long time of the school year and when he came back he had a prosthetic that had a slight hook that could connect and pinch. He told us all that he was in Neverland with Peter Pan and Captain Hook gave him a hook too. Such a sweet man.
    I haven’t seen him in decades I hope that he had something amazing like this now.

  • @Karina_Engr
    @Karina_Engr Год назад +483

    What a feel good story. Thank you engineers, scientists, volunteers, parents, doners, and anyone else I’m forgetting.

    • @Acemobilesuit
      @Acemobilesuit Год назад +5

      If you got a good settlement or have insurance of a rich person my mom lost her leg in a car accident and she has never been offered a decent prosthetic

    • @evolicious
      @evolicious Год назад +1

      @@Acemobilesuit bruh. There are entire communities that 3D print custom prosthetics for FREE. Just use google. No need to buy one of these insanely overpriced prosthetics these days when tons of people just built them themselves and give them away. It's really not a lot of work and cost these days to make one yourself too.

    • @SungazerDNB
      @SungazerDNB Год назад +15

      ​@@Acemobilesuit that's in the USA. We all know it's a third world country 😅

    • @AdamJensen_
      @AdamJensen_ Год назад +1

      @@SungazerDNB Europe is a continent actually. But cope harder, 3rdworlder. I know you're just bitter you'll never be an Amerigod. For that I feel so sorry for you 😅

    • @etiennen4136
      @etiennen4136 Год назад

      So the US is only spending $100m on prosthetics but spending $200B on destroying a country and murdering 100s of thousands. And then also spending close to $900B on trying to wipe out the world

  • @StealthyDead
    @StealthyDead Год назад +296

    That last story is the stuff of magic. I mean it all is, but literally rewiring a human's ability to use their OWN limb again? That's amazing and ground breaking

    • @Truth-Freedom-Justice
      @Truth-Freedom-Justice Год назад +20

      It’s just a bypass way to skip the injured spine by connecting brain to the peripheral nerves and muscles. Idea is simple but the effort they put into must be huge!

    • @onepunch9416
      @onepunch9416 Год назад +1

      absolutely beautiful

    • @ericlanglitz2394
      @ericlanglitz2394 Год назад +11

      This gave me an idiot’s “a-ha” moment, recalling that the human body will literally build new blood vessels to re-route around blockages. I wish I was knowledgeable enough to understand why nerves can’t do the same.
      If science could transition that hurdle, this seems to be closest example in practice. Amazing stuff.

    • @junovicz
      @junovicz 9 месяцев назад

      Pretty awesome technology

  • @whizbang7130
    @whizbang7130 Год назад +135

    Amazing work by gifted people. Very heartfelt episode.

  • @KatySueWho
    @KatySueWho Год назад +60

    That final man’s story absolutely took my breath away. Astounding. Scientifically provided miracle.

  • @DrRobertMPick
    @DrRobertMPick Год назад +95

    This is awesome! 10 years from now we'll look back at this and see how much further we have come. Hopefully alo in the future, cloning may help some grow back lost/injured, or severed body parts!

    • @evolicious
      @evolicious Год назад +4

      10 years from now, it will still be insanely overpriced and only for rich people, except there might be some better options in the home-made custom market with 3D printing and CNC.

    • @coyotePAC3
      @coyotePAC3 Год назад +3

      It's like watching the Wright Flyer's first flight or the Apollo 11 moon landing - what a time to be alive!

    • @modsurgeon
      @modsurgeon Год назад +23

      @@evolicious Sure, just like cell phones, home computers, continuous glucose monitors, insulin pumps, airline travel, 65" flat screen TVs, digital watches...

    • @EddyKorgo
      @EddyKorgo Год назад

      In 10 years i will be dead and my son will be living on Mars while you waiting for fap hand. Seriously. We are so behind with some technologies. It hurts

    • @chaddaddywarden4349
      @chaddaddywarden4349 Год назад

      Kinda sucks that this sector of tech is progressing so slowly bc its not as profitable as others

  • @christianamador4054
    @christianamador4054 Год назад +47

    This gives me chills. I have so much respect for the people who worked on this. These prosthetics are life changing!

  • @ashroskell
    @ashroskell Год назад +5

    It is comforting to see that journalists are still capable of doing genuinely fascinating stories about how not all technologies are necessarily inherently, “threatening,” in some way. And it’s heart warming to see how these patients can enter into a genuinely rewarding form of, “enlightened self interest,” wherein they contribute to scientific understanding and development by receiving the very latest and best help that science has to offer, in return for their participation in shifting forward the boundaries of the possible.
    A great story all round. And I’m so glad that 60 Minutes still takes the time to cover (and return to) these paradigm altering stories. Thanks for that.
    In ten years from now, I suspect your follow up stories to be reporting on wonders we thought impossible today. Technology is moving so quickly now.

  • @edwardhighmann6421
    @edwardhighmann6421 Год назад +14

    If only you had people dedicated to solving problems like this. Instead of creating more. Great piece

  • @evphex
    @evphex Год назад +10

    First hand shake in 8 years.
    Awesome man.

  • @muatring
    @muatring Год назад +21

    The fact that you can control a robotic limb meters away from you with your own mind is mindblowing to me. Reconnecting your brain to parts you lost control of is also really interesting.

  • @monsieur_piyushsingh
    @monsieur_piyushsingh Год назад +6

    My project at IIT Delhi was something similar to the last one except that instead of using electric current to control muscles, I was using current to track the nerves during surgical operations

  • @markpage9886
    @markpage9886 Год назад +38

    There is no limits to how far I'd go for the brave men and women who sacrificed so much of themselves. They deserve all and more than all.

    • @MGrey-qb5xz
      @MGrey-qb5xz Год назад

      how about not using ports in skull for it?

    • @Harrison.DuRant
      @Harrison.DuRant Год назад

      @@MGrey-qb5xz Wut?

    • @MGrey-qb5xz
      @MGrey-qb5xz Год назад

      @@Harrison.DuRant yes alien?

    • @Harrison.DuRant
      @Harrison.DuRant Год назад

      @@MGrey-qb5xz lol! What was your original question? What do you mean "ports in skull"?

    • @paulazemeckis7835
      @paulazemeckis7835 Год назад

      Do you have a better place to recommend than the skull?

  • @mistycloud4455
    @mistycloud4455 Год назад +13

    i am tearing up the people involved in this technology are amazing

  • @DETROIT1948
    @DETROIT1948 Год назад +1

    Had my left leg amputated at the VA Hospital in Tampa in Dec 2021. I walk on a prothesis. I'm on my forth leg. Soon I will run.
    I'm 75. God Bless The VA.

  • @justtim1269
    @justtim1269 Год назад +30

    One of the greatest episodes your wonderful program has ever done. Truly hair raising and mind blowing. Very powerful. The future is bright

  • @antipop885
    @antipop885 Год назад +11

    Omg the story of the last person in this segment is amazing 🤯

  • @ledwysdelgado7304
    @ledwysdelgado7304 Год назад +16

    That's amazing. Hopefully, they can make it better in a few more years.

  • @williamgibble8361
    @williamgibble8361 Год назад +16

    On the verge of a cure for being paralyzed!!! Omg that is outstanding 👏

  • @PsychicThursday
    @PsychicThursday Год назад +8

    Great story and advancements. Incredible work by these scientists, engineers, and technicians, and the participants

  • @chicodimdim3025
    @chicodimdim3025 Год назад +6

    That story about the man at the end just wanting to be able to shake someone’s hand and say hi just makes me appreciate the small things in my life. I am so happy to see people benefiting from this technology. Definitely had a tear of joy here.

  • @codyhanthorn4270
    @codyhanthorn4270 Год назад +1

    this is the kind of stuff that units us in all manners. I really love advancements like this.

  • @adim00lah
    @adim00lah Месяц назад

    Seeing stuff like this makes me appreciate I have 4 properly working limbs. I hope they continue to make breakthroughs in this area for people, because this technology is desperatly needed for many people.

  • @nozyspy4967
    @nozyspy4967 Год назад +3

    The idea of going straight from the brain to the limb and bypassing the damaged spinal cord is ingenious!

  • @lisaharper1827
    @lisaharper1827 Год назад +12

    Got me at ‘just a simple handshake’. Technology doing good in the world!

  • @djtomoy
    @djtomoy Год назад +4

    It’s nice to be reminded that people are still putting advance technology to good use 😊

  • @icyBulls
    @icyBulls Год назад +1

    So happy to see them feel back to normal again.

  • @dadada486
    @dadada486 7 месяцев назад +2

    Prosthetics is one of the miracles and triumphs of science and engineering. It's so advanced its almost the stuff of Sci fi and fantasy! It's come such a long way.

  • @garryblack764
    @garryblack764 Год назад +1

    That is truly fantastic! Thank you for sharing.

  • @bigj1905
    @bigj1905 Год назад +2

    I can’t believe that, in just a decade or two, basic cybernetics are probably going to be a reality for most amputees.
    Crazy.

  • @bryanalcantarfilms
    @bryanalcantarfilms Год назад

    This is simply amazing.

  • @TravelBreakthrough
    @TravelBreakthrough Год назад +1

    This is just the start of it man stuff is going to be amazing in another ten years

  • @michaelbliss2490
    @michaelbliss2490 Год назад +5

    This is incredible

  • @kalsangtashi3040
    @kalsangtashi3040 Год назад

    Thanks to all the scientists who make things like this that really help humanity🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏👍👍👍👍👍

  • @Pestbringer89
    @Pestbringer89 Год назад +4

    Insane, give it another 10 years. Cant even imagine what they will be able to do.

    • @evolicious
      @evolicious Год назад +1

      lol, in 10 years, it's gonna be in the same state. Bet.

    • @Pestbringer89
      @Pestbringer89 Год назад +2

      @@evolicious Are you saying that in 10 years there will be no advancement in robotics?

    • @dragoonduneman4161
      @dragoonduneman4161 Год назад +1

      @@Pestbringer89 sadly that will be the case, technology move slow for gadget for the human body. Sometime some new tech comes along and its not really an improvement as its just a sidestep.

  • @cybergothika6906
    @cybergothika6906 Год назад +5

    We're having this mega boom of hyper tech out of sudden. From AI to prosthetics and you know what, this is awesome. Hope never meant so much.

  • @YaleStewartArt
    @YaleStewartArt Год назад +1

    My God, how incredible.

  • @michaelstone7514
    @michaelstone7514 Год назад

    Amazing work!! Keep it up defeat physical handicaps!!

  • @victorsamaniego3329
    @victorsamaniego3329 Год назад +1

    so fascinating.

  • @thomaspeterson9346
    @thomaspeterson9346 Год назад

    This is the most fascinating thing I’ve ever seen

  • @mattmayo3539
    @mattmayo3539 Год назад +11

    The human body and mind are a fascinating machine that we’re still perfecting.

    • @mattjack3983
      @mattjack3983 Год назад +1

      We're still perfecting it? You mean we haven't perfected it yet? Like, we don't already know and understand every single thing about the human brain and body that there is to know and understand? I don't believe it!!! Impossible!!!

    • @bolt5916
      @bolt5916 Год назад +2

      Just like anything else in this world.... Have we actually truly master'd anything yet

    • @pietrojenkins6901
      @pietrojenkins6901 Год назад +2

      @@bolt5916 we're still perfecting warfare and spending about $2tr a yr on that front. World war 2 was child's play.

    • @Deploracle
      @Deploracle Год назад +1

      It was perfect long before you and I arrived.

  • @tonycr27
    @tonycr27 Год назад

    Incredible, the miracle of recovering the control of your own body

  • @somahmed123
    @somahmed123 Год назад +3

    This is gold.

  • @guthixisdead
    @guthixisdead Год назад

    That is just wholly amazing!! Going to sleep mindblown.

  • @mole2100
    @mole2100 Год назад

    Holy cow, that's incredible!

  • @TheRealityWarper08
    @TheRealityWarper08 3 месяца назад

    This is good. We need more feel-good stories to win people over to these concepts. There are simply too many people that are afraid of this kind of technology right now, and stories like this are certain to loosen their closed biases.

  • @Bestfuture-2023EL
    @Bestfuture-2023EL Год назад +9

    Well done🎉. Would ❤to hear more on these in the future as these new technologies are truly helpful and hopeful for amputees and the disadvantaged ones.

  • @babyboo600
    @babyboo600 Год назад

    truly amazing !

  • @oxouk
    @oxouk Месяц назад

    Absolutely remarkable.

  • @ChrisG1392
    @ChrisG1392 Год назад +6

    This advancement in prosthetics is probably the best thing we've done with our technological advances. Just incredible.

  • @ronkirk5099
    @ronkirk5099 Год назад +2

    Looks like we are right on the cusp of prosthetics 3.0 which will really make some people's lives much better. The wonders of medical science and engineering.

  • @B0A2
    @B0A2 Год назад +2

    This is some incredible research I am interested in how neural link will fit in among these solutions.

    • @m_sedziwoj
      @m_sedziwoj Год назад

      Overtake brain - computer interface, and will make progress a lot faster because make it easier for people to use it. But first they must pass clinic tests, because in monkey they works great, question is how with humans.

  • @gabyfridman7475
    @gabyfridman7475 Год назад

    Thank you!!!

  • @cherylwin9364
    @cherylwin9364 Год назад +1

    OUTSTANDING

  • @maxdon2001
    @maxdon2001 Год назад

    Great video! Fascinating stuff!

  • @greg7811
    @greg7811 Год назад +2

    I lost my dominant left hand 13 years ago. I have a bionic hand, it sits in the closet collecting dust. I've broken and repaired every finger on it. My hook comes in handy for yardwork but generally i just adapt to doing things with one hand including typing.

  • @jblue8436
    @jblue8436 Год назад

    TAXES WELL SPENT TY ALL

  • @TomasPetkevicius94
    @TomasPetkevicius94 Год назад +1

    This is amazing!

  • @rockmusicvideoreviewer896
    @rockmusicvideoreviewer896 Год назад +1

    WOW!! Amazing technology!

  • @JesusChristDenton_7
    @JesusChristDenton_7 Год назад +8

    "We are not only men of science: we are men of hope."
    - Dr. Jonas Venture

  • @4729Punisher
    @4729Punisher Год назад +5

    I was at the lake with my family, mom, dad, brother, and sister. I dove off the side of a jet ski, and no one was looking, I was maybe 30 feet away from everyone. I dove in head first and slammed into the sand, I remember my body going numb instantly and month, nose filling up with sand. In like .1 of a second, I thought, "Oh no, this is bad, really bad." I made it out with no problems. However, I feel really lucky because of how scarry it was in the moment. I thought for sure I was dead or paralyzed, and no one had seen me get in. It scared me so bad that I never did it again or anything like that. I always check and make sure my 18yo and 2yo kids never do anything like that. Because at the time, I didn't think I could die or get paralyzed. But it's that easy. This guy probably thought the same, and boom, just like that, you're gone. My advice to anyone is to always let your kids and family know what you're doing and how easy it is to leave this world and to just watch out, keep your eyes open, and your brain on.

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Год назад +1

      Yeah life has a lot of hidden dangers and we can get hurt easily. I'm glad you made it out fine! 😊

  • @steve-real
    @steve-real Год назад

    that is mind blowing!!!!

  • @bigdaddy1024
    @bigdaddy1024 Год назад +6

    Wonderful 🎧🇱🇷

  • @kkcook3743
    @kkcook3743 Год назад +11

    Way to go! Gotta love science and technology 😂

  • @DJcyberslash
    @DJcyberslash 4 месяца назад

    Incredible

  • @c2thamax246
    @c2thamax246 Год назад +2

    Truly incredible. What better way could there be to use technology? This is the kind of innovation we should be investing billions into.

  • @captainnima
    @captainnima Год назад +8

    God bless them for what they’re doing.

  • @poolhall9632
    @poolhall9632 Год назад +6

    Finally a DOD expense I can get behind.

  • @James60226
    @James60226 Год назад +1

    The people who work on projects like this are on another level of smart..

  • @neighbor9672
    @neighbor9672 Год назад +1

    Incredible what the brain interface technology can do. In 10 more years I bet it becomes incredibly sophisticated and powerful!

  • @libbybertrand9320
    @libbybertrand9320 Год назад +3

    Amazing!😄❤️🙌🏼

  • @jaredf6205
    @jaredf6205 Год назад +3

    I really want to go back to school and become an engineer. I would love to help design prosthetics.

  • @glmorten
    @glmorten Год назад

    Wow the last story was crazy. One thing as a society we need to be mindful of is when we open up doors like this there are new problems introduced. I dont know what they are and could hypothesize but we must make sure proper safety rails are in place.

  • @celeryslice
    @celeryslice Год назад +1

    These studies are going to open the door for so many others in the future. This is a quantum leap in biotechnology and I anticipate my lifetime to have even more of these scientific miracles.

    • @coachacola3755
      @coachacola3755 5 месяцев назад

      Lol why aren’t we funding this stuff

  • @AORD72
    @AORD72 Год назад

    Amazing!

  • @skehleben7699
    @skehleben7699 2 месяца назад

    Extrordinary research!

  • @Just4womenafrica
    @Just4womenafrica Год назад

    This is so amazing

  • @Slim08151
    @Slim08151 Год назад +1

    Thank God, after all those years I can finally flip off people like I used to back in the day.

  • @Z7GFX
    @Z7GFX Год назад

    Amazing

  • @Flubbred
    @Flubbred Год назад +2

    "From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh" might be true one day.

  • @user-et3he2nk3i
    @user-et3he2nk3i 3 месяца назад +1

    הכל נכון מחכה להיפגש.דורית גאץ.מדהים.

  • @shishirshohan1690
    @shishirshohan1690 Год назад +2

    Not ideology, not religion, not political revolution. It's science and technology which fundamentally improve human condition.

  • @CaliMeatWagon
    @CaliMeatWagon Год назад

    Okay, that bit about the handshake got me.

  • @kersplatte
    @kersplatte Год назад +2

    Freaking awesome and amazing! Yay for human Ingenuity!!

  • @TheTishy44
    @TheTishy44 Год назад

    This is awesome

  • @DirtCobaine
    @DirtCobaine 3 месяца назад

    This is something that I ALWAYS have been following since I was a kid, something near and dear to my heart. Which might be strange as I’m not an amputee. It’s just a kid there a few fields In science that we should be further ahead than we currently are, and prosthesis is one of those fields. And there are so much peripheral benefits to such research. Not only does it effect limbs but also organs. Learning how to rewire our nerves with our brains. The applications are limitless. From a prosthetic finger to a fully functional prosthetic eye. People who’ve been in fires or accidents that have taken parts of their face could have new faces. Type 1 diabetes could be cured with a prosthetic pancreas. Our war veterans can have their limbs back and even still be combat ready for those who’ve made the military their entire life.

  • @containedhurricane
    @containedhurricane Год назад +1

    The researchers from a university in Singapore used brain scanner and AI to generate the images of scanned person's mind. If we can use the extremely low frequency of the brain to control the prosthetics, that would be a major breakthrough

  • @StruggleButtons
    @StruggleButtons Год назад

    I am beyond impressed (not easy to do). This is the first time I watched a video with my jaw on the floor. Were will we be in 10 more years?

  • @ohhhgggeeezzz
    @ohhhgggeeezzz Год назад

    wooooowwww love this story!

  • @irish7460
    @irish7460 Год назад +1

    Humanity at it's best.

  • @heckensteiner4713
    @heckensteiner4713 Год назад +1

    Holy son of a flicklestein! Crazy stuff happening here. Amazing where the technology is going. Sad there wasn't much improvement for about 10 years, but it seems like now is the right time with both AI and robotics improving exponentially.

  • @deathblade909
    @deathblade909 Год назад

    Holy heck , that wild

  • @scotchbarrel4429
    @scotchbarrel4429 Год назад

    Amazing 👊👌😎

  • @Soulessdeeds
    @Soulessdeeds Год назад

    Ian Davis on RUclips. Simple man making his own hand. And its insane how cool it is.

  • @MilohRhed
    @MilohRhed Год назад +1

    very cool

  • @wtx64940
    @wtx64940 Год назад

    one question
    is Sekiro's prosthetic arm and tools possible as well?

  • @Truth-Freedom-Justice
    @Truth-Freedom-Justice Год назад +1

    The last case: It’s just a bypass way to skip the injured spine by connecting the brain to the peripheral nerves and muscles. Idea is simple but the effort they put into must be huge!

  • @ChrisSanders-lv7kl
    @ChrisSanders-lv7kl Год назад

    beautiful

  • @ted9499
    @ted9499 Год назад

    Pretty cool the Dean Kane is still at it

  • @mr_whyy
    @mr_whyy Год назад

    Just wow, at least some good news in this world