Here’s how a bio implant stopped Long Island woman’s ‘horrific’ arthritis in its tracks: ‘This is the future’
A Long Island speech pathologist said a pioneering bio implant stopped her “horrific” rheumatoid arthritis in its tracks.
Massapequa’s Dawn Steiner, 58, said even a simple handshake would mean agony — and after 15 years she retreated into a reclusive lifestyle.
“My husband had to help me get dressed,” she told The Post.
“I could not wash my hair. I could barely take a shower by myself.”
But her new state-of-the-art bio-implant has miraculously regulated the RA with minimal invasiveness — and just a minute of daily stimulation. It is linked to Steiner’s vagus nerve, a crucial connector between the brain, major organs, and other bodily functions.
