DocumentCode
1245804
Title
An actuator system for investigating electrophysiological and biomechanical features around the human ankle joint during gait
Author
Andersen, Jacob Buus ; Sinkjær, Thomas
Author_Institution
Dept. of Med. Inf. & Image Anal., Aalborg Univ., Denmark
Volume
3
Issue
4
fYear
1995
fDate
12/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
299
Lastpage
306
Abstract
A system has been developed which is able to impose a fast ankle rotation during gait. The two-link system consists of a mechanical joint which is strapped to the calf and the foot of the subject. The mechanical joint turns around the ankle joint by means of Bowden wires and it is connected to a motor placed next to a treadmill where the subject is walking. By position feedback from the mechanical joint the motor is regulated in such a may that it follows the movement of the ankle joint without influencing the gait pattern. The system is designed to impose a fast ankle rotation with a displacement of up to 20°, e.g., a 8° stretch is performed with a rise time of 32 ms during any time of the gait cycle. The system attached to the subject´s leg weights in total 0.9 kg. The system is designed to elicit a stretch reflex in the ankle extensor muscles during walking. The prospect of the system is to investigate electrophysiological and biomechanical features during a naturally evoked stretch reflex of the ankle extensors in both healthy and motor impaired subjects. The system is able to produce a perturbation of the ankle extensors at a walking speed of up to 6 km/h during the total gait cycle
Keywords
actuators; bioelectric phenomena; biomechanics; biomedical equipment; rotation; 32 ms; Bowden wires; actuator system; ankle extensor muscles; ankle extensors perturbation; biomechanical features; electrophysiological features; gait pattern; human ankle joint; leg weight; mechanical joint; naturally evoked stretch reflex; position feedback; rise time; stretch; treadmill walking; walking speed; Actuators; Biomechanics; Foot; Force measurement; Humans; Jacobian matrices; Legged locomotion; Muscles; Tendons; Wires;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1063-6528
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/86.481969
Filename
481969
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