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The iShoe, with a half dozen sensors, is not an instant alarm, though it will send out a signal if the wearer actually falls. It's more like a data recorder that the user can bring to a doctor or balance specialist for help if the dangerous pressure patterns are seen. Balance problems are caused by many factors, including deteriorating muscle tone, bad vision and inner ear problems, and the possible solutions can be as simple as a tai chi exercise to build strength. "Poor balance isn't something you have to accept. ... You can help yourself, you can improve balance," Forth said. The iShoe has a way to go to reach the market. It's still being tested to ensure it can hold up under constant foot pounding, and Lieberman and Forth are still perfecting the software that identifies the faulty pressure patterns. Research involving elderly people is just getting under way. Lieberman estimates $1 million is needed for a broad clinical trial, and $3 million to $4 million to bring the insole to market. The company has applied for a patent and as well as federal funding. Once funding is obtained, the iShoe could be for sale in 18 months, Lieberman said. Dr. Robert Lindsay, a professor of medicine at Columbia University and a trustee at the osteoporosis foundation, said to be of any use the iShoe would have to be affordable, durable, and collect data that's easy for physicians to read. But he said he's not aware of other technology that can do what the iShoe aims to
-- provide objective data in an area of medicine where doctors are now forced to depend on subjective data, such as self-reporting by patients and their own visual analysis. "If they have a sensor that can detect differences in balance, it is fairly easy to train the elderly, using physical therapy, to improve their balance," Lindsay said. "It would be a good tool."
[Associated
Press;
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