A device created by Johns Hopkins engineering students to help infants with nerve injuries won the top honor at the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Innovation Showcase (ISHOW) USA 2025, held virtually July 29-30.
The invention, called DINA, or Dynamic Infant Neurorehab Aid, is a soft robotic suit created to help rehabilitate newborns with brachial plexus palsy (NBPP), a nerve injury that can affect arm and shoulder movement.
Led by biomedical engineering master’s student Victor Ticllacuri, the team—which also includes master’s students Ana Paula Pérez, Yuxuan Bai, Michela De Marzi, and Stevenson University undergraduate Alex Reimert—will receive a $10,000 seed grant and an invitation to the annual ISHOW Bootcamp. The prize package provides them with expert guidance and resources to help bring their product to market.