Welcome to the

MotionReporter Clinical Research Opportunity

Patent Pending

Intro Deck

Click on the slides to see our intro deck with all animations. It does not have voiceover.

Waking up a shut-down muscle

My daughter’s quad shut down after her ACL surgery, meaning she couldn’t lift her right leg. We used the mirroring function that we developed to wake up the affected side in stroke patients and mirrored her good leg onto her affected leg. Her leg popped up after just 3 minutes of mirrored exercises - an incredibly emotional moment.

She had been working on it for weeks and it was expected to take weeks longer.

Waking up a hand 18 month after stroke

A patient’s right body half was effected after a stroke with spasm in her hand that cramped the hand shut. She also has Parkinson’s since 2016.

She had over 1000 therapy sessions with PTs and OTs over the 18 month. In 15 minutes her right hand was able to open. The results staid stable until the next day when she was even able to hold a cup or electric toothbrush.

The effects staid stable over a week.

Waking up a second shut-down muscle 2/2

A patient’s quad shut down after a complex patella surgery, and he couldn’t lift his right leg. We met him during his first PT session after 6 weeks of full straight-leg immobilization in a knee brace. We used the mirroring function. He lifted only his good leg three times and saw both legs rising in the glasses. Then he tried to lift both legs - still seeing his good leg mirrored - and on the second attempt, the right leg popped up.

The PTs who had just worked with him were shocked.

Clear Movement Cues. Show, don't Tell.

After hip surgery, the gait of the first patient’s right leg was limited in range. Using MotionReporter, we placed clear visual targets for the knee and hand to reach, which instantly improved their gait. The improvement was so immediate that the PTs laughed in surprise. In the following sessions - even weeks later - no further corrections were needed.

The second patient responded similarly. She had a knee injury that interfered with her gait.

Post-Shoulder Surgery Recovery

A teenage patient experienced repeated shoulder dislocations and eventually underwent surgery. After six weeks of immobilization, he began physical therapy and was making steady progress—though not without discomfort.

With the help of MotionReporter’s mirror function, his movements became significantly more comfortable. He reported that it helped “reconnect” his muscle coordination by transferring patterns from his unaffected shoulder to the recovering one.