Customized robot exoskeletons are available to help children with disabilities to stand up again!

Driving China January 22, 2018 According to foreign media reports, Manmett Maggu set up a startup focused on children's robotic exoskeletons, and the company’s origins are that Maggu used to help people with cerebral palsy, because he May never walk. It is reported that several years ago, Rahul Udasi, the co-founder of Maggue and TrexoRobotics, was only a student of the University of Waterloo in Canada, but the two were robot enthusiasts. After Maggu learned that his sister had a cerebral palsy, he and Rahul Udasi sought to use a robotic exoskeleton to help the sister-in-law. Get mobile. However, there are no such products on the market, so they decided to develop their own, and only officially established a company in 2016. Maggu, who is the CEO, is responsible for business development, and Udasi is the company’s chief technology officer. The more role he plays is product development. When their first testable prototype was completed, they brought it into India and let Maggu's nephew try it out. In addition, Trexo won a race led by the Toronto Hospital Charity. This year, Trexo will become more busy. The company is currently preparing to launch a pilot study at the Children's Hospital of Cincinnati. It hopes to obtain U.S. government approval before the end of this year. For children who are affected by the disease and lose their ability to move, the robotic exoskeleton may give them a chance to stand up again.