
The 23-year-old Austrian, Christian Kendlboer, lost both hands in an accident from an electric shock five years ago. Later, he received prosthetic hands that allowed him to live a normal life, one of which was an automated limb controlled by the brain.
This technology is new, and Candleboer was the first person in the world to receive it. American and Austrian doctors joined together during a six-hour operation, attaching nerves collected from his arms to his pectoral muscles, giving him some control over the prosthesis.
This allowed Christian Candleber to control his Subaru, which may not have been a good idea. On Tuesday, his car flew off the road, hit a tree and caught fire. The truck driver, who became an unwitting witness to the incident, rescued Christian from a burning car, but it was too late.
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Candlebour spent several days in intensive care with serious head injuries. The senior doctor at the hospital in Graz, Andreas Valtensdorfer, said that despite the best efforts to save the victim, the patient died last night.
It is not yet clear whether the failure of prostheses (for example, jamming of drives or lagging of electronics) has become a primordial tragedy, but the whole situation is becoming a matter of debate about whether he could be allowed to operate the vehicle at all, both for his own safety and for others. people.
LProf got a video about this man
video.vienna.at/video/43712/prothese-fuhlende-hand-als-prototyp-prasentiert