Title :
Safety concept for robotic gait trainers
Author :
Schmidt, H. ; Hesse, S. ; Bernhardt, R.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Neurological Rehabilitation, Univ. Hosp. Charite, Berlin, Germany
Abstract :
The work presents a newly developed safety concept for application of robotic walking simulators based on the principle of programmable footplates in gait rehabilitation. Unlike robotic hand devices or exoskeleton robots for gait training on treadmills, which can be built relatively lightweight and require only small drives which can hardly do harm to the patient, a programmable footplate walking simulator with permanent foot fixture essentially needs to have powerful drives in order to carry and move the full body weight of the patient. The developed safety concept comprises several redundant algorithms and devices in the real-time robot control software, electrical emergency stop circuitry and machine mechanics. The mechanical core is a machine design offering maximum passive security by covering all moving parts (i.e. robot drives and linkages) and a newly developed foot safety release binding, which is mounted on each footplate. The release binding allows a safe release from the footplate in all directions in any degree of freedom in the sagittal plane. It is combined with an ankle goniometer which is equipped with adjustable emergency stop limit switches, thus ensuring that the allowed ankle range-of-motion is not exceeded.
Keywords :
drives; gait analysis; goniometers; medical robotics; orthotics; ankle goniometer; ankle range-of-motion; degree of freedom; electrical emergency stop circuitry; emergency stop limit switches; gait rehabilitation; machine mechanics; programmable footplates; real-time robot control software; robot drives; robotic gait trainer; robotic walking simulator; safety concept; sagittal plane; treadmills; Circuit simulation; Electrical safety; Exoskeletons; Fixtures; Foot; Legged locomotion; Railway safety; Rehabilitation robotics; Robots; Software safety;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2004. IEMBS '04. 26th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8439-3
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2004.1403775