STIWELL med4

STIWELL med4 offers unique improvements: The processing of myoelectric signals with four independently adjustable stimulation channels and two measurement channels open up a very broad field of application ranging from neurological indications to incontinence therapy.

Woman on the beach.

STIWELL med4 - Available in the U.S. Only


Functional electrotherapy promotes the rehabilitation of motor functions following a stroke or after damages to the central nervous system e.g. incomplete paraplegia. Here, STIWELL med4 can offer unique improvements: The processing of myoelectric signals with four independently adjustable stimulation channels and two measurement channels open up a very broad field of application ranging from neurological indications to incontinence therapy. The multi-channel control also allows the stimulation of complex movement sequences.

The therapy goal, namely to restore lost mobility and autonomy, is accelerated with the use of biofeedback functions. These are based on the ability of the human brain to recreate structures in non-damaged areas that are no longer available in the damaged areas. Of crucial importance during the targeted training is the link of technical movement stimulation and deliberate movement intention.

The latter is recognized as a myoelectric muscle potential of the to-be-trained muscle. Patients receive feedback visually or auditory. Moreover, STIWELL med4 can recognize muscle activities which the patient had adopted as a means to compensate for lost functions yet which hinder the restoration of the original functionality. This feature for excluding compensatory movements during training furthermore contributes to the efficiency of STIWELL med4. Finally, STIWELL med4 is user-friendly and intuitive to operate. For its use at home, patients require only a simple therapeutic introduction.

STIWELL med4 EMG triggered stimulation


STIWELL med4 Brochure - Product Information
FES & EMG Analysis
Functional Electrical Stimulation and EMG Triggered Electrotherapy in motor rehabilitation after stroke: An Analysis of Scientific Literature

This is not a PDF document with low-barrier readability. (09041639.1_FESEMG_Analysis.pdf | 1.21 MB)
STIWELL med4 user Alexandra at the beach.

Alexandra

After a car accident, Alexandra Burneleit was paralyzed, suffered from the consequences of a cerebral hemorrhage and could not talk anymore. However, her iron will remained. Doctors had prognosticated a life as a severely handicapped person. Today, however, Alexandra can again walk as well as take care of her son and her household. Her experiences with the treatment method of functional electrotherapy: “The stimulation helps to sense where the movement is taking place and where it comes from. The patient then tries to join in with these movements. And then came the day when I was able to do that without electricity.”

 


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