Science Builds the Bionic Cat

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
45,698
1
0
Science Builds the Bionic Cat


A veterinary surgeon in the U.K. has brought human civilization one step closer to ruin by attaching two bionic limbs to a cat that was injured in a farming accident.

Oscar the cat had a bit of a bad day earlier this year: While taking a pleasant nap in a farmer's field in Jersey, he was clobbered by a combine harvester that took off his back legs. His owner managed to get him to a vet, where he was stabilized and patched up, but instead of fitting him for one of those little ass-carts with the tiny wheels, the local vet suggested his owners contact Noel Fitzpatrick, a Surrey veterinary surgeon who specializes in prosthetics.

Fast-forward through phone conversations, pictures and x-rays, and Oscar was flown from Jersey [http://www.jersey.com/] to the U.K., where he was measured up for his new bionic legs. Fitzpatrick implanted pegs called "intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthetics," or Itaps, into Oscar's stumps that left the cat with metal studs where his lower legs used to be.

"The real revolution with Oscar is [that] we have put a piece of metal and a flange into which skin grows into an extremely tight bone," Fitzpatrick told the BBC [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science_and_environment/10404251.stm]. "We have managed to get the bone and skin to grow into the implant and we have developed an 'exoprosthesis' that allows this implant to work as a see-saw on the bottom of an animal's limbs to give him effectively normal gait."

The "exoprothesis" is actually two prototype feet that attach to the pegs to give Oscar a more natural degree of "wobble" when he walks. The attachments were designed and built by engineers at the University of Salford [http://www.salford.ac.uk/], although Fitzpatrick had to make some final adjustments with the ultimate handyman tool. "The key to all great technology is tape," he explained. "Oscar is black and I'm not going to put brown feet on a black cat, so I'm going to put some black tape on."

The final result was pretty spectacular: A few minutes after the sedative wore off, Oscar was up and moving around like a champ, even climbing over obstacles Fitzpatrick had put out to limit the cat's range.

You might be wondering why so much time and effort was sunk into creating and attaching replacement legs for a cat that was too stupid to get out of the way of a giant piece of farm machinery. The truth is that, awesome though cats may be (in a vicious, predatory, "they're-not-cute-they're-dangerous-and-violent" way), the real motivation is hope that the technology can be put to use in people.

Itaps was originally designed for amputation patients with "stump sockets," explained University College London [http://www.ucl.ac.uk/] Professor Gordon Blunn, who led the team that developed the technology. "This means they fix their artificial limb with a sock, which fits over the stump. In a lot of cases this is successful, but you [often] get rubbing and pressure sores," he said.

Blunn said Oscar's success showed off the technology's potential. "The intriguing thing with Oscar was that he had two implants - one in each back leg, and in quite an unusual site," he continued. "Noel has some brilliant ideas, and we're continuing to work closely with him to develop new technologies."

What's next for Oscar? Perhaps bionic claws that will allow him to destroy your furniture, maul your dog and kill every bird on the block, better, stronger and faster than ever before. After all, we have the technology; we have the capability.



Permalink
 

Katherine Kerensky

Why, or Why Not?
Mar 27, 2009
7,744
0
0
Augmented... cat...
Two things I love, combined.
I... I want one...
And if it helps to better adapt the technology to human patients...
I want my fake limbs, already ;~;
 

Sebenko

New member
Dec 23, 2008
2,531
0
0
Poor cat.

Have you seen a combine harvester? Used to scare me shitless as a kid.
Though how the cat didn't notice the combine, I don't know.

Still, that's great for the cat. Cybercat! Cat 5E! Cats are awesome. I watched my cat fail miserably at catching a squirrel, and be amazed by a tap. Water on, water off...
 

spectrenihlus

New member
Feb 4, 2010
1,918
0
0
Greyfox105 said:
Augmented... cat...
Two things I love, combined.
I... I want one...
Next thing you know your cat will be telling you to come with him if you want to live.
 

El Poncho

Techno Hippy will eat your soul!
May 21, 2009
5,890
0
0
Now it's only mission in life is to use it's new bionic powers to get revenge on the giant machine of death!
 

Katherine Kerensky

Why, or Why Not?
Mar 27, 2009
7,744
0
0
spectrenihlus said:
Greyfox105 said:
Augmented... cat...
Two things I love, combined.
I... I want one...
Next thing you know your cat will be telling you to come with him if you want to live.
...
Feth yeah. I will do whatever it takes to help our new cat-bot overlords.
This kinda fits in with that computer that was so complex that it was compared to a cat's brain...
 

Crimson King

New member
May 16, 2009
337
0
0
Why couldn't they have made something less loveable as a bionic animal? I for one don't trust most bionic things.
 

MissPixxie

New member
Mar 15, 2010
291
0
0
Poor thing... Personally I'd have bumped it because of the trauma. I mean, those things are damn scary!

There we go Oscar, be glad you're not my cat =D
 

Kiithid

New member
Aug 12, 2009
151
0
0
Do really sly women count as cats?

OT: They are replacing lab-rats with field-cats! What next? Replacing lap dogs with giant pumas?
 

WiccaVamp

New member
Jun 26, 2009
142
0
0
Technology is a scary thing, I see so much positive potential and negative that its occasionally overwelming to think about.Lets hope this continues to progress in a positive manner. No cyber attack dogs or wire tap implants, but thumbs up for positive prostetic reasearch.
 

ImprovizoR

New member
Dec 6, 2009
1,952
0
0
Poor kitty. I hope this will help the cat to live a bit more normal life. Yeah, I love cats more then people.
 

Icehearted

New member
Jul 14, 2009
2,081
0
0
ImprovizoR said:
Poor kitty. I hope this will help the cat to live a bit more normal life. Yeah, I love cats more then people.
I get the feeling anyone with a cat feels that way, since love makes them pick up cat poop, but people poop, fuhgeddaboudit!
 

Frequen-Z

Resident Batman fanatic.
Apr 22, 2009
1,351
0
0
Oh but surely you meant to call them "intraosseous transcataneous amputation prosthetics"!

I'll be going now.
 

Asturiel

the God of Pants
Nov 24, 2009
3,940
0
0
ImprovizoR said:
Poor kitty. I hope this will help the cat to live a bit more normal life. Yeah, I love cats more then people.
Theres something weird or bad about that?

OT: This is really interesting, will do a lot for the medicine field, both animal and human. I just hope this is more standardized over here when I finally deal with little Oscars.
 

Jared

The British Paladin
Jul 14, 2009
5,630
0
0
Awww! Cute kitteh! And now walking kitteh! Thats awesome! Maybe see same in people too? That would be intresting