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1.
Disabil Rehabil Assist Technol ; : 1-11, 2023 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37610140

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The increasing number of wheelchair users and their risk of medical complications such as pressure ulcers (PU) make it important to have a better understanding of their seating characteristics. However, while most studies tackling this issue are based on static measurements, wheelchair users are active in their wheelchairs when performing daily life activities. This suggests the need to assess the mechanical loads at the wheelchair user's body-seat interface during dynamic activities. OBJECTIVES: A scoping review was conducted to explore the existing data (shear load and pressure) and highlight significant parameters, relevant conditions and methodological strategies when studying wheelchair users performing a dynamic task. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The literature search was performed by applying the PRISMA methodology. RESULTS: A total of 11 articles met the inclusion criteria. Differences between static and dynamic data were found in the literature for peak pressure values, pressure distribution and the location of peak pressure. None measured tangential load at the seat/body interface, although two studies measured the shift of the ischial region. A significant impact of the type of pathology has been quantified, showing the need to perform experimental studies on diverse populations. The protocol and the pressure parameters studied were very diverse. CONCLUSION: Further studies carefully choosing interface pressure mapping parameters and investigating a broader range of pathologies are required. Additionally, researchers should focus on finding a way to measure seated tangential load.

2.
J Tissue Viability ; 22(3): 83-90, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23791763

ABSTRACT

This paper introduces the recently developed TexiCare device that aims at preventing pressure ulcers for people with spinal cord injury. This embedded device is aimed to be mounted on the user wheelchair. Its sensor is 100% textile and allows the measurement of pressures at the interface between the cushion and the buttocks. It is comfortable, washable and low cost. It is connected to a cigarette-box sized unit that (i) measures the pressures in real time, (ii) estimates the risk for internal over-strains, and (iii) alerts the wheelchair user whenever necessary. The alert method has been defined as a result of a utility/usability/acceptability study conducted with representative end users. It is based on a tactile-visual feedback (via a watch or a smartphone for example): the tactile modality is used to discreetly alarm the person while the visual modality conveys an informative message. In order to evaluate the usability of the TexiCare device, a paraplegic volunteer equipped his wheelchair at home during a six months period. Interestingly, the first results revealed bad habits such as an inadequate posture when watching TV, rare relief maneuvers, and the occurrence of abnormal high pressures.


Subject(s)
Paraplegia/complications , Pressure Ulcer/etiology , Pressure Ulcer/prevention & control , Textiles , Wheelchairs , Aged , Equipment Design , Humans , Male , Pilot Projects , Pressure , Volunteers
3.
Age (Dordr) ; 34(5): 1179-94, 2012 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21850402

ABSTRACT

Several changes in the human sensory systems, like presbycusis or presbyopia, are well-known to occur with physiological ageing. A similar change is likely to occur in proprioception, too, but there are strong and unexplained discrepancies in the literature. It was proposed that assessment of the attentional cost of proprioceptive control could provide information able to unify these previous studies. To this aim, 15 young adults and 15 older adults performed a position matching task in single and dual-task paradigms with different difficulty levels of the secondary task (congruent and incongruent Stroop-type tasks) to assess presumed age-related deficits in proprioceptive control. Results showed that proprioceptive control was as accurate and as consistent in older as in young adults for a single proprioceptive task. However, performing a secondary cognitive task and increasing the difficulty of this secondary task evidenced both a decreased matching performance and/or an increased attentional cost of proprioceptive control in older adults as compared to young ones. These results advocated for an impaired proprioception in physiological ageing.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Attention/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Posture/physiology , Proprioception/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Humans , Task Performance and Analysis
4.
PLoS One ; 4(10): e7550, 2009 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19888336

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Pressure sores are localized injuries to the skin and underlying tissues and are mainly resulting from overpressure. Paraplegic peoples are particularly subjects to pressure sores because of long-time seated postures and sensory deprivation at the lower limbs. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we report outcomes of a feasibility trial involving a biofeedback system aimed at reducing buttock overpressure whilst an individual is seated. The system consists of (1) pressure sensors, (2) a laptop coupling sensors and actuator (3) a wireless Tongue Display Unit (TDU) consisting of a circuit embedded in a dental retainer with electrodes put in contact with the tongue. The principle consists in (1) detecting overpressures in people who are seated over long periods of time, (2) estimating a postural change that could reduce these overpressures and (3) communicating this change through directional information transmitted by the TDU.Twenty-four healthy subjects voluntarily participated in this study. Twelve healthy subjects initially formed the experimental group (EG) and were seated on a chair with the wireless TDU inside their mouth. They were asked to follow TDU orders that were randomly spread throughout the session. They were evaluated during two experimental sessions during which 20 electro-stimulations were sent. Twelve other subjects, added retrospectively, formed the control group (CG). These subjects participated in one session of the same experiment without any biofeedback.Three dependent variables were computed: (1) the ability of subjects to reach target posture (EG versus CG), (2) high pressure reductions after a biofeedback (EG versus CG) and (3) the level of these reductions relative to their initial values (EG only). Results show (1) that EG reached target postures in 90.2% of the trials, against 5,3% in the CG, (2) a significant reduction in overpressures in the EG compared to the CG and (3), for the EG, that the higher the initial pressures were, the more they were decreased. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The findings suggest that, in this trial, subjects were able to use a tongue tactile feedback system to reduce buttock overpressure while seated. Further evaluation of this system on paraplegic subjects remains to be done.


Subject(s)
Biofeedback, Psychology , Posture , Tongue , Adult , Calibration , Case-Control Studies , Computers , Equipment Design , Feedback , Humans , Postural Balance , Pressure , Proprioception , Retrospective Studies , Touch
5.
Gait Posture ; 28(4): 711-5, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18632272

ABSTRACT

We investigated the effects of an electro-tactile vestibular substitution system (EVSS) on upright postural control in 12 unilateral vestibular-defective patients. The underlying principle of this system consists in supplying the user with additional information about his/her head orientation/motion with respect to gravitational vertical, normally provided by the vestibular system, through electro-tactile stimulation of his/her tongue. Subjects were asked to stand as immobile as possible with their eyes closed in two No-EVSS and EVSS conditions. Reduced centre-of-foot pressure displacements were observed in the EVSS relative to the No-EVSS condition. These results, demonstrating the effectiveness of the EVSS system in improving upright postural control in unilateral vestibular-defective patients, could have implications in clinical and rehabilitative areas.


Subject(s)
Biofeedback, Psychology , Postural Balance/physiology , Vestibule, Labyrinth/physiology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Equipment Design , Female , Humans , Male , Pressure , Proprioception/physiology , Tongue/physiology , Touch/physiology
6.
Eur J Appl Physiol ; 104(1): 119-25, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18506472

ABSTRACT

Separate studies have reported that postural control during quiet standing could be (1) impaired with muscle fatigue localized at the lower back, and (2) improved through the use of plantar pressure-based electro-tactile biofeedback, under normal neuromuscular state. The aim of this experiment was to investigate whether this biofeedback could reduce postural destabilization induced by trunk extensor muscles. Ten healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible in four experimental conditions: (1) no fatigue/no biofeedback, (2) no fatigue/biofeedback, (3) fatigue/no biofeedback and (4) fatigue/biofeedback. Muscular fatigue was achieved by performing trunk repetitive extensions until maximal exhaustion. The underlying principle of the biofeedback consisted of providing supplementary information related to foot sole pressure distribution through electro-tactile stimulation of the tongue. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Results showed (1) increased CoP displacements along the antero-posterior axis in the fatigue than no fatigue condition in the absence of biofeedback and (2) no significant difference between the no fatigue and fatigue conditions in the presence of biofeedback. This suggests that subjects were able to efficiently integrate an artificial plantar pressure information delivered through electro-tactile stimulation of the tongue that allowed them to suppress the destabilizing effect induced by trunk extensor muscles fatigue.


Subject(s)
Biofeedback, Psychology , Foot/innervation , Muscle Contraction , Muscle Fatigue , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Posture , Proprioception , Tongue/innervation , Adult , Humans , Male , Pressure , Touch
7.
Neurosci Lett ; 431(3): 206-10, 2008 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18166270

ABSTRACT

The present study aimed at investigating the effects of an artificial head position-based tongue-placed electrotactile biofeedback on postural control during quiet standing under different somatosensory conditions from the support surface. Eight young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible with their eyes closed on two Firm and Foam support surface conditions executed in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. In the Foam condition, a 6-cm thick foam support surface was placed under the subjects' feet to alter the quality and/or quantity of somatosensory information at the plantar sole and the ankle. The underlying principle of the biofeedback consisted of providing supplementary information about the head orientation with respect to gravitational vertical through electrical stimulation of the tongue. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Larger CoP displacements were observed in the Foam than Firm conditions in the two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Interestingly, this destabilizing effect was less accentuated in the Biofeedback than No-biofeedback condition. In accordance with the sensory re-weighting hypothesis for balance control, the present findings evidence that the availability of the central nervous system to integrate an artificial head orientation information delivered through electrical stimulation of the tongue to limit the postural perturbation induced by alteration of somatosensory input from the support surface.


Subject(s)
Biofeedback, Psychology , Head , Postural Balance/physiology , Posture/physiology , Proprioception/physiology , Tongue/innervation , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Touch/physiology , Transducers, Pressure
8.
Exp Brain Res ; 183(2): 235-40, 2007 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17639365

ABSTRACT

Whereas the acuity of the position sense at the ankle can be disturbed by muscle fatigue, it recently also has been shown to be improved, under normal ankle neuromuscular state, through the use of an artificial tongue-placed tactile biofeedback. The underlying principle of this biofeedback consisted of supplying individuals with supplementary information about the position of their matching ankle position relative to their reference ankle position through electrotactile stimulation of the tongue. Within this context, the purpose of the present experiment was to investigate whether this biofeedback could mitigate the deleterious effect of muscle fatigue on joint position sense at the ankle. To address this objective, sixteen young healthy university students were asked to perform an active ankle-matching task in two conditions of No-fatigue and Fatigue of the ankle muscles and two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Measures of the overall accuracy and the variability of the positioning were determined using the absolute error and the variable error, respectively. Results showed that the availability of the biofeedback allowed the subjects to suppress the deleterious effects of muscle fatigue on joint position sense at the ankle. In the context of sensory re-weighting process, these findings suggested that the central nervous system was able to integrate and increase the relative contribution of the artificial tongue-placed tactile biofeedback to compensate for a proprioceptive degradation at the ankle.


Subject(s)
Ankle Joint/innervation , Biofeedback, Psychology/methods , Muscle Fatigue/physiology , Proprioception/physiology , Tongue/innervation , Touch/physiology , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Electric Stimulation/methods , Electrodes , Humans , Male , Posture , Task Performance and Analysis
9.
Neurosci Lett ; 421(2): 173-7, 2007 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17566646

ABSTRACT

The purpose of the present experiment was to investigate whether the sensory weighting of a plantar pressure-based, tongue-placed tactile biofeedback for controlling posture could be subject to inter-individual variability. To achieve this goal, 60 young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible with their eyes closed in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Overall, results showed reduced CoP displacements in the Biofeedback relative to the No-biofeedback condition, evidencing the ability of the central nervous system to efficiently integrate an artificial plantar-based, tongue-placed tactile biofeedback for controlling posture during quiet standing. Results further showed a significant positive correlation between the CoP displacements measured in the No-biofeedback condition and the decrease in the CoP displacements induced by the use of the biofeedback. In other words, the degree of postural stabilization appeared to depend on each subject's balance control capabilities, the biofeedback yielding a greater stabilizing effect in subjects exhibiting the largest CoP displacements when standing in the No-biofeedback condition. On the whole, by evidencing a significant inter-individual variability in sensory weighting of an additional tactile information related to foot sole pressure distribution for controlling posture, the present findings underscore the need and the necessity to address the issue of inter-individual variability in the field of neuroscience.


Subject(s)
Biofeedback, Psychology/physiology , Postural Balance/physiology , Posture/physiology , Proprioception/physiology , Touch/physiology , Adult , Biomechanical Phenomena , Female , Foot/physiology , Humans , Male , Pressure , Tongue/physiology
10.
Exp Brain Res ; 181(4): 547-54, 2007 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17476487

ABSTRACT

The purpose of the present study was to determine the effects of a plantar pressure-based, tongue-placed tactile biofeedback on postural control mechanisms during quiet standing. To this aim, 16 young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible with their eyes closed in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements, recorded using a force platform, were used to compute the horizontal displacements of the vertical projection of the centre of gravity (CoG( v )) and those of the difference between the CoP and the vertical projection of the CoG (CoP-CoG( v )). Analysis of the CoP-CoG( v ) displacements showed larger root mean square (RMS) and mean power frequencies (MPF) in the Biofeedback than in the No-biofeedback condition. Stabilogram-diffusion analysis further showed a concomitant increased spatial and reduced temporal transition point co-ordinates at which the corrective processes were initiated and an increased persistent behaviour of the CoP-CoG( v ) displacements over the short-term region. Analysis of the CoG( v ) displacements showed decreased RMS and increased MPF in the Biofeedback relative to the No-biofeedback condition. Stabilogram-diffusion analysis further indicated that these effects mainly stem from reduced spatio-temporal transition point co-ordinates at which the corrective process involving CoG( v ) displacements is initiated and an increased anti-persistent behaviour of the CoG( v ) displacements over the long-term region. Altogether, the present findings suggest that the main way the plantar pressure-based, tongue-placed tactile biofeedback improves postural control during quiet standing is via both a reduction of the correction thresholds and an increased efficiency of the corrective mechanism involving the CoG( v ) displacements.


Subject(s)
Biofeedback, Psychology/physiology , Postural Balance , Posture/physiology , Pressure , Proprioception/physiology , Touch/physiology , Adult , Humans , Task Performance and Analysis , Tongue/physiology
11.
Exp Brain Res ; 179(3): 409-14, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17136521

ABSTRACT

The present paper introduces an original biofeedback system for improving human balance control, whose underlying principle consists in providing additional sensory information related to foot sole pressure distribution to the user through a tongue-placed tactile output device. To assess the effect of this biofeedback system on postural control during quiet standing, ten young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible with their eyes closed in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Results showed reduced CoP displacements in the Biofeedback relative to the No-biofeedback condition. The present findings evidenced the ability of the central nervous system to efficiently integrate an artificial plantar-based, tongue-placed tactile biofeedback for controlling control posture during quiet standing.


Subject(s)
Feedback/physiology , Foot/physiology , Mechanoreceptors/physiology , Posture/physiology , Touch/physiology , Adult , Central Nervous System/physiology , Foot/innervation , Humans , Leg/innervation , Leg/physiology , Muscle, Skeletal/innervation , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Pressure , Tongue/innervation , Tongue/physiology , Transducers, Pressure , Weight-Bearing/physiology
12.
Neurosci Lett ; 405(1-2): 19-23, 2006 Sep 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16876318

ABSTRACT

Proprioception is comprised of sensory input from several sources including muscle spindles, joint capsule, ligaments and skin. The purpose of the present experiment was to investigate whether the central nervous system was able to integrate an artificial biofeedback delivered through electrotactile stimulation of the tongue to improve proprioceptive acuity at the ankle joint. To address this objective, nine young healthy adults were asked to perform an active ankle-matching task with and without biofeedback. The underlying principle of the biofeedback consisted of supplying subjects with supplementary information about the position of their matching ankle position relative to their reference ankle position through a tongue-placed tactile output device (Tongue Display Unit). Measures of the overall accuracy and the variability of the positioning were determined using the absolute error and the variable error, respectively. Results showed more accurate and more consistent matching performances with than without biofeedback, as indicated by decreased absolute and variable errors, respectively. These findings suggested that the central nervous system was able to take advantage of an artificial tongue-placed tactile biofeedback to improve the position sense at the ankle joint.


Subject(s)
Ankle Joint , Biofeedback, Psychology , Proprioception , Tongue , Touch , Adult , Biofeedback, Psychology/instrumentation , Humans , Male
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