2006年VOA标准英语-Advances in Artificial Limbs Help Returning Sol(在线收听) |
By Melinda Smith A record number of U.S. soldiers injured in Iraq have lost arms and legs in explosions caused by remote-controlled bombs. The need for more comfortable, adaptable artificial limbs has inspired new technology to help smooth their return to civilian life. VOA's Melinda Smith has a progress report from the military's premier hospital, in Washington, D.C., which cares for these amputees. -----
'Back into action' does not mean back on the front lines for a large majority of these soldiers. It means learning to walk before learning to run.
Hinkhouse likes the mechanical leg because it gives him more muscle control. "There's probably some more fine tuning I can do, to make sure I walk a little bit better, and not fall so much." He was only 19 when an improvised bomb in the Iraqi town of Ramadi blew up next to the military vehicle in which he was riding. He lost a leg, part of his skull, and one of his buddies. "My friend was sitting six inches next to me, off to my right, and he died." Hinkhouse might also have died if it had not been for the medics who moved in behind the blast. Quick-response surgical teams can set up a hospital unit in one hour.
Bullet-proof vests worn by the U.S. military protect the largest part of the body. The head, arms and legs are more vulnerable. The rate of head and neck injuries, as well as limb amputations, has been higher in Iraq compared to previous wars. In the past, wartime has always been the source of innovation in the development of prosthetics. The conflict in Iraq has prompted the use of lighter, more durable materials like graphite and titanium for the prostheses. Daniel Carroll adds, "The biggest advent we saw was the addition of carbon fiber, which is an energy storing material for things, to add strength to the socket and also flexibility and energy storage to the feet." Returning soldiers like Kade Hinkhouse say they realize their physical abilities will never be as they were before going off to war. But they hope to have fewer limitations by learning to use these lighter, more flexible prostheses. "If I have kids, how am I going to chase after them in a wheelchair, if I don't have my leg on. There are a lot of obstacles that I'll have to overcome." |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/11/35459.html |