Advertisement
Science
ChinaScience

Real-life ‘RoboCop’? Chinese policeman beats paralysis with spinal interface implant

Months after world’s first such surgery for quadriplegia, the traffic officer can stand and walk again with significant upper limb strength

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
4
Liu Boqi received the world’s first spinal interface surgery for quadriplegia at the Second Hospital of Jilin University on January 22. Photo: CCTV
Shi Huang

In the 1987 American action film RoboCop, protagonist Alex Murphy is a police officer in a dystopian 21st-century Detroit when he is mortally wounded and rebuilt by cybernetic enhancements so that he can keep fighting crime.

Nearly 40 years on, a Chinese policeman and a team of doctors at Jilin University have turned what once seemed a highly futuristic treatment into an encouraging new reality.

Recently, state broadcaster CCTV reported that the Second Hospital of Jilin University earlier this year performed the world’s first spinal interface surgery for quadriplegia – paralysis that affects all four limbs and the torso from the neck down.
Advertisement

Nine months after the surgery, the patient was able to stand and walk again with the aid of an exoskeleton robot. He also regained significant upper limb strength.

Liu Boqi was working as a traffic officer in Changchun, Jilin province, at the time of his accident in 2024. Photo: Handout
Liu Boqi was working as a traffic officer in Changchun, Jilin province, at the time of his accident in 2024. Photo: Handout

Like the fictional Murphy, the patient, Liu Boqi, is a police officer, working as a traffic officer in Changchun, Jilin province, at the time of his brush with death.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x