Lin Qing once said that the first generation prosthetics were maintained with inhibitors, or rather, this kind of stability was purely akin to drinking poison to quench thirst. The neural connection points would trigger severe autoimmune disorders, resulting in a series of hard-to-cure side effects that worsen over time. Eventually, even if the prosthetics were removed, users could easily die from various inflammations and organ failures.
By the second generation prosthetics, nanobots became an excellent solution to this problem. They are halfway between machinery and living organisms, continuously repairing damaged nerve bundles, significantly reducing the circulatory system's rejection of foreign objects.
But this doesn't mean the prosthetics are flawless.
