Rehabilitation therapy plays an essential role in assisting people with stroke regain arm function. Upper extremity robot therapy offers a number of advantages over manual therapies, but can suffer from slacking behavior, where the user lets the robot guide their movements even when they are capable of doing so by themselves, representing a major barrier to reaching the full potential of robot-assist rehabilitation. This is a pilot clinical study that investigates the use of an electromyography-based adaptive assist-as-needed controller to avoid slacking behavior during robotic rehabilitation for people with stroke. The study involved a convenience sample of five individuals with chronic stroke who underwent a robot therapy program utilizing horizontal arm tasks. The Fugl-Meyer assessment (FM) was used to document motor impairment status at baseline. Velocity, time, and position were quantified as performance parameters during the training. Arm and shoulder surface electromyography (EMG) and electroencephalography (EEG) were used to assess the controller's performance. The cross-sectional results showed strong second-order relationships between FM score and outcome measures, where performance metrics (path length and accuracy) were sensitive to change in participants with lower functional status. In comparison, speed, EMG and EEG metrics were more sensitive to change in participants with higher functional status. EEG signal amplitude increased when the robot suggested that the robot was inducing a challenge during the training tasks. This study highlights the importance of multi-sensor integration to monitor and improve upper-extremity robotic therapy.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10566685PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0292627PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

adaptive assist-as-needed
8
assist-as-needed controller
8
upper extremity
8
people stroke
8
robot therapy
8
slacking behavior
8
sensitive change
8
change participants
8
functional status
8
robot
5

Similar Publications

Importance: Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common developmental motor disorder in children. Robot-assisted gait training (RAGT) using a wearable robot can provide intensive overground walking experience.

Objective: To investigate the effectiveness of overground RAGT in children with CP using an untethered, torque-assisted, wearable exoskeletal robot.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Robotics has emerged as a promising avenue for gait retraining of persons with chronic hemiparetic gait and footdrop, yet there is a gap regarding the biomechanical adaptations that occur with locomotor learning. We developed an ankle exoskeleton (AMBLE) enabling dorsiflexion assist-as-needed across gait cycle sub-events to train and study the biomechanics of motor learning stroke. This single-armed, non-controlled study investigates effects of nine hours (9 weeks × 2 sessions/week) locomotor task-specific ankle robotics training on gait biomechanics and functional mobility in persons with chronic hemiparetic gait and foot drop.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study proposes a novel gait rehabilitation method that uses a hybrid system comprising a powered ankle-foot orthosis (PAFO) and FES, and presents its coordination control. The developed system provides assistance to the ankle joint in accordance with the degree of volitional participation of patients with post-stroke hemiplegia. The PAFO adopts the desired joint angle and impedance profile obtained from biomechanical simulation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Robot-assisted rehabilitation has exhibited great potential to enhance the motor function of physically and neurologically impaired patients. State-of-the-art control strategies usually allow the rehabilitation robot to track the training task trajectory along with the impaired limb, and the robotic motion can be regulated through physical human-robot interaction for comfortable support and appropriate assistance level. However, it is hardly possible, especially for patients with severe motor disabilities, to continuously exert force to guide the robot to complete the prescribed training task.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rehabilitation therapy plays an essential role in assisting people with stroke regain arm function. Upper extremity robot therapy offers a number of advantages over manual therapies, but can suffer from slacking behavior, where the user lets the robot guide their movements even when they are capable of doing so by themselves, representing a major barrier to reaching the full potential of robot-assist rehabilitation. This is a pilot clinical study that investigates the use of an electromyography-based adaptive assist-as-needed controller to avoid slacking behavior during robotic rehabilitation for people with stroke.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!