DocumentCode
984042
Title
Effects of Inertia and Wrist Oscillations on Contralateral Neurological Postural Tremor Using the Wristalyzer, a New Myohaptic Device
Author
Grimaldi, G. ; Lammertse, P. ; Van Den Braber, N. ; Meuleman, J. ; Manto, M.
Author_Institution
Palermo Univ., Palermo
Volume
2
Issue
4
fYear
2008
Firstpage
269
Lastpage
279
Abstract
Upper limb postural tremor consists of mechanical-reflex and central-neurogenic oscillations, superimposed upon a background of irregular fluctuations in muscle force. Muscle spindles play key-roles in the information flow to supra-spinal and spinal generators. Oscillations were delivered using a new generation portable myohaptic device, called ldquowristalyzer,rdquo taking into account the ergonomy of upper limbs and allowing a fine adjustment to each configuration of upper limb segments. The nominal torque of the first generation device is 4 Nm, with a maximal rotation velocity of 300 degrees/s and a range of motion of plusmn45 degrees. Reliability was assessed in basal condition and during loading conditions. We assessed the effects of the addition of inertia on postural tremor of the finger in a group of 26 neurological patients and the effects of wrist oscillations upon contralateral postural tremor in 6 control subjects and in 7 neurological patients exhibiting a postural tremor. Patients showed two different behaviors in response to inertia and exhibited an increased variability of postural tremor during fast oscillations (13.3 Hz). One patient with overactivity of the olivocerebellar pathways exhibited a drop in the peak frequency of more than 20%. The relative power of the 8-12 Hz subband was significantly higher in controls both in basal condition and during oscillations (p = 0.028 and p = 0.015, respectively). The second generation wristalyzer allows to investigate the effects of mechanical oscillations up to frequency of 50 Hz. This mechatronic device can assess the responsiveness of tremor generators to stimulation of muscle spindles and biomechanical loading. Potential applications are the monitoring of dysmetria under various inertial or damping conditions, the assessment of rigidity in Parkinson´s disease and the characterization of voluntary muscle force.
Keywords
biomechanics; biomedical equipment; diseases; electromyography; haptic interfaces; medical diagnostic computing; neurophysiology; oscillations; torque; Parkinson´s disease; biomechanical loading; central neurogenic oscillations; contralateral neurological postural tremor; damping; dysmetria; frequency 13.3 Hz; frequency 50 Hz; frequency 8 Hz to 12 Hz; inertia; mechanical reflex oscilations; mechatronic device; muscle force; muscle spindles; myohaptic device; torque; upper limb postural tremor; wrist oscillations; wristalyzer; Condition monitoring; Damping; Delay; Fingers; Fluctuations; Frequency; Mechatronics; Muscles; Torque; Wrist; Biomechanical; haptics; inertia; limb motion; myohaptic device; oscillations; pathophysiology; tremor;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1932-4545
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBCAS.2008.926726
Filename
4669627
Link To Document