KTH designs elastic body suit for brain damage treatment

October 15, 2013 - Germany

An alternative to painful treatments and surgery for brain damage may now be available with a specially-designed elastic body suit fitted with electrodes, which was designed at KTH Royal Institute of Technology in collaboration with health care and business partners.

The Mollii garment could improve range of motion and reduce pain for people with brain injuries and neurological disorders such as MS and cerebral palsy. The garment provides the body with electrical stimulation to ease tension and spasms. The result is reduced pain perception and increased mobility.

The idea originated with a Swedish chiropractor, Fredrik Lundqvist, who worked with rehabilitation of brain-damaged patients. Lundqvist struck upon the idea of sewing electrical stimuli – similar to TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation) electrodes – into garments that the patient can wear.

He turned to KTH researchers Johan Gawell and Jonas Wistrand at the Department of Machine Design. “They produced a prototype of the product, and today they are working full time on the development of Mollii,” Lundqvist says.

“We need more engineers in care,” Lundqvist says. “I believe that dedicated, young people who are passionate about the future should be given a free hand to develop innovations.”

Designed with ordinary swimsuit material, the body suit has conductive elastic sewn into it, with electrodes located at the major muscles. Battery-powered light current is conducted via silver wires to 58 electrodes attached to the inside of the garment, which in turn stimulate as many as distinct 42 muscles, according to the patient’s needs.

Batteries are placed in a small control box fitted at the waistband. “The idea is that the clothes should be used for a few hours, three times a week, and the effect is expected to last for up to two days,” Lundqvist says.

“To enhance the quality of life the patient may choose to use Mollii before it's time to go to work, school or to a social event. That enables the body to function as well as possible when it is really needed,” he says.

The garment has been shown to be highly effective in patient examinations performed in collaboration with a PhD student Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute, Lundvist says. “One-hundred percent of the participants in the survey say they have experienced improvements in existing function or quality of life,” he says.

Stroke patients with paralysis on one side have been found to gain increased mobility in spastic limbs, in that they had improved gait and their arms and hands worked better after treatment.

“As a bonus, the patients often sleep better, and their pharyngeal motor skills and speech improved after using Mollii,” Lundqvist says.

The treatment of patients with movement difficulties and pain due to neurological damage can often require surgery, injections of botolinumtoxin (neurotoxin) or strong medications.


“These treatments mean high costs and side effects, while our clothes are simple and safe to use,” Lundqvist says. “You can reduce the number of hospital visits because the therapy can be performed at home. And when the mobility increases, there is less need for walkers or wheelchairs.”

Mollii is an approved CE marked medical device, but independent clinical tests have yet been performed. But the company behind the treatment, Inerventions, has launched a scientific study of the clinical effectiveness of the garment, in partnership with Rehab Medical clinics in Linköping and Borås. Lundqvist says the results should come next year.

In Denmark, the garment is already subsidized with municipal funds for treatment of nerve damage, based on recommendations from a physiotherapist.

Inerventions’ goal is to establish Mollii in Europe, the U.S. and Japan. The garment can in the future be used to help patients with chronic pain and people with Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS).

“It can also help children with physical disabilities or motor difficulties in the feet, such as constantly walking on toes or with their feet at inward angles,” Lundqvist says.