• DocumentCode
    1493088
  • Title

    Path Control: A Method for Patient-Cooperative Robot-Aided Gait Rehabilitation

  • Author

    Duschau-Wicke, Alexander ; Von Zitzewitz, Joachim ; Caprez, Andrea ; Lünenburger, Lars ; Riener, Robert

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Mech. & Process Eng., ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
  • Volume
    18
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2010
  • Firstpage
    38
  • Lastpage
    48
  • Abstract
    Gait rehabilitation robots are of increasing importance in neurorehabilitation. Conventional devices are often criticized because they are limited to reproducing predefined movement patterns. Research on patient-cooperative control strategies aims at improving robotic behavior. Robots should support patients only as much as needed and stimulate them to produce maximal voluntary efforts. This paper presents a patient-cooperative strategy that allows patients to influence the timing of their leg movements along a physiologically meaningful path. In this ??path control?? strategy, compliant virtual walls keep the patient´s legs within a ??tunnel?? around the desired spatial path. Additional supportive torques enable patients to move along the path with reduced effort. Graphical feedback provides visual training instructions. The path control strategy was evaluated with 10 healthy subjects and 15 subjects with incomplete spinal cord injury. The spatio-temporal characteristics of recorded kinematic data showed that subjects walked with larger temporal variability with the new strategy. Electromyographic data indicated that subjects were training more actively. A majority of iSCI subjects was able to actively control their gait timing. Thus, the strategy allows patients to train walking while being helped rather than controlled by the robot.
  • Keywords
    electromyography; gait analysis; medical robotics; neurophysiology; patient rehabilitation; position control; electromyographic data; gait timing control; graphical feedback; iSCI subjects; incomplete spinal cord injury; leg movements; neurorehabilitation; path control; patient-cooperative robot-aided gait rehabilitation; recorded kinematic data; spatio-temporal characteristics; supportive torques; visual training instructions; Control; gait rehabilitation; patient-cooperative; rehabilitation robotics; Gait Disorders, Neurologic; Humans; Leg; Male; Man-Machine Systems; Physical Therapy Modalities; Robotics; Therapy, Computer-Assisted; User-Computer Interface;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1534-4320
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNSRE.2009.2033061
  • Filename
    5280197