DocumentCode :
1510722
Title :
The Rutgers Arm II Rehabilitation System—A Feasibility Study
Author :
Burdea, Grigore C. ; Cioi, Daniel ; Martin, Joseph ; Fensterheim, Devin ; Holenski, Maeve
Author_Institution :
Tele-Rehabilitation Inst., Rutgers Univ., Piscataway, NJ, USA
Volume :
18
Issue :
5
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
505
Lastpage :
514
Abstract :
The Rutgers Arm II (RA II) is a new system that trains the shoulder/arm motor control, strengthening, arm speed of motion, endurance, and grasp strength in a single rehabilitation session. The system components are a tilted low-friction table, a forearm support with markers and wireless transmitter, a shoulder appendage to detect compensatory leaning, infrared vision tracking, a large display and a PC running custom virtual reality games. Three participants in the chronic stage post-stroke were trained on the RAII for four weeks (12 sessions) and had a follow-up evaluation after three months. The results of this study indicate that the participants were able to use the technology, and preliminary results are encouraging. One participant showed improvement in all timed Jebsen-Taylor test tasks, all participants had a larger shoulder range-of-motion and pinch strength of the affected hand post-training. Computerized measure of supported arm reach area increased in two participants post-training and in all participants at follow-up. Participants reported an improved ability to perform activities of daily living with the affected arm. There was good compliance by the participants, each of whom attended all sessions. The participants accepted the training length, even with some sessions lasting 1 h (excluding rest periods). The participants´ subjective evaluation rated the system an average 3.7 out of 5 (see also the accompanying taped video interview of one of the participants).
Keywords :
biomechanics; medical control systems; patient rehabilitation; virtual reality; Jebsen-Taylor test; Rutgers Arm II rehabilitation system; arm motor control; compensatory leaning; endurance; forearm support; grasp strength; infrared vision tracking; shoulder motor control; tilted low friction table; virtual reality game; wireless transmitter; Area measurement; Displays; Infrared detectors; Infrared sensors; Motor drives; Read only memory; Sensor systems; Shoulder; Testing; Virtual reality; Grasp strength; gravity; infrared tracking; stroke; upper extremity; virtual reality; Aged; Equipment Failure Analysis; Feasibility Studies; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Paralysis; Prosthesis Design; Robotics; Stroke; Therapy, Computer-Assisted; Treatment Outcome; 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.2010.2052128
Filename :
5482032
Link To Document :
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