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1.
Clin Rehabil ; 35(11): 1577-1589, 2021 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34027703

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Many patients with subacute stroke rely on the nonparetic arm and leg to propel manual wheelchairs. We designed a bimanual, lever-driven wheelchair (LARA) to promote overground mobility and hemiparetic arm exercise. This study measured the feasibility of using LARA to increase arm movement, achieve mobility, and improve arm motor recovery (clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02830893). DESIGN: Randomized, assessor-blind, controlled trial. SETTING: Two inpatient rehabilitation facilities. SUBJECTS: Nineteen patients with subacute stroke (1 week to 2 months post-stroke) received 30 minutes extra arm movement practice daily, while admitted to inpatient rehabilitation (n = 10) or before enrollment in outpatient therapy (n = 9). INTERVENTIONS: Patients were randomized to train with the LARA wheelchair (n = 11) or conventional exercises with a rehabilitation therapist (n = 8). MAIN MEASURES: Number of arm movements per training session; overground speed; Upper Extremity Fugl-Meyer score at three-month follow-up. RESULTS: Participants who trained with LARA completed 254 (median) arm movements with the paretic arm each session. For three participants, LARA enabled wheelchair mobility at practical indoor speeds (0.15-0.30 m/s). Fugl-Meyer score increased 19 ± 13 points for patients who trained with LARA compared to 14 ± 7 points with conventional exercises (P = 0.32). Secondary measures including shoulder pain and increased tone did not differ between groups. Mixed model analysis found significant interaction between LARA training and treatment duration (P = 0.037), informing power analysis for future investigation. CONCLUSIONS: Practising arm movement with a lever-driven wheelchair is a feasible method for increasing arm movement early after stroke. It enabled wheelchair mobility for a subset of patients and shows potential for improving arm motor recovery.


Subject(s)
Stroke Rehabilitation , Stroke , Wheelchairs , Arm , Humans , Recovery of Function , Single-Blind Method , Stroke/complications , Treatment Outcome
2.
Disabil Rehabil Assist Technol ; 16(1): 49-62, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31248296

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Individuals who require manual wheelchairs after stroke are typically taught to ambulate with compensatory propulsion (i.e., using their non-paretic arm and foot), risking disuse of the paretic arm. We investigated whether stroke survivors can instead ambulate in a bimanual, lever-driven wheelchair that requires the paretic arm to contribute half the propulsive input. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seventeen individuals with chronic stroke and severe hemiparesis (upper extremity Fugl-Meyer scores between 10 and 24) participated across two experiments. In the first experiment, participants (n = 12) ambulated in straight paths. In the second experiment, participants (n = 12) also performed turns, using an improved version of the wheelchair that incorporated handbrakes. Twelve unimpaired controls also completed the second experiment. Motion capture and EMG were used to compare biomechanics between groups. RESULTS: Altogether, 15 of 17 participants with stroke could ambulate 30 m in straight paths, and 9 of 12 could turn 1800° entirely under the power of their paretic arm. Participants with stroke exhibited largely healthy biomechanics, with minimal shoulder hiking/leaning or trunk inclination. Their arm muscle EMG patterns were similar to those used by unimpaired participants, excepting delayed elbow extensor activation. CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with severe arm impairment in the chronic stage of stroke retain sufficient strength and coordination with their paretic arm to manoeuvre bimanual, lever-driven wheelchairs. We suggest bimanual, lever-driven propulsion should be explored in stroke rehabilitation practice as an alternative to compensatory wheelchair propulsion, as it has the potential to exercise healthy movement synergies, which may in turn help drive use-dependent motor recovery. Implications for rehabilitation Severe arm impairment arising after stroke does not generally eliminate the motor dexterity needed to bimanually propel a manual wheelchair, provided that the wheelchair is modified to remove the requirement to grasp and release the push rim. Such exercise appears a good candidate to facilitate rehabilitation outcomes because it depends on alternating muscle activity and improving elbow extension. Such wheelchair propulsion involves largely normal biomechanics; shoulder hiking and leaning are absent and trunk inclination is rare.


Subject(s)
Equipment Design , Paresis/rehabilitation , Stroke Rehabilitation/methods , Wheelchairs , Adult , Aged , Biomechanical Phenomena , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Upper Extremity
3.
IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot ; 2019: 631-636, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31374701

ABSTRACT

Currently, driver rehabilitation involves use of fixed-base simulators. Such simulators are used infrequently and with little success. We hypothesize that the absence of motion feedback may be limiting the therapeutic effectiveness of driving simulation. During real, motor vehicle driving, the driver receives motion feedback that provides rich and real-time information about acceleration, deceleration and turning of the vehicle. Thus, motion feedback may be a key missing component that could dramatically increase the clinical pragmatism of simulator-based driver rehabilitation. In this pilot study, six young adult drivers participated in simulated driving tasks with or without motion feedback. Participants who received motion feedback completed faster laps on a racetrack and committed fewer driving infractions on a highway. They reported being more motivated and aware of the pressure of high speed driving. Particularly, they experienced substantially fewer symptoms of simulator sickness, a primary impedient to widespread use of driving simulators for driver rehabilitation. These preliminary finding motivate a full investigation of the impacts of motion feedback during simulated driving, and of the efficacy of lower cost, two degree of freedom driving simulators for clinical use.


Subject(s)
Automobile Driving , Computer Simulation , Feedback , Motion , Adult , Humans , Male , Pilot Projects , Young Adult
4.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2018: 2519-2522, 2018 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30440920

ABSTRACT

Slacking limits the rehabilitative effectiveness of certain exercises following stroke. When patients receive assistance during an exercise, they exhibit a persistent tendency to reduce their own contribution to that exercise. This phenomenon was first coined 'slacking' in the context of robot-mediated therapy, where controller design continues to involve prediction and mitigation of slacking. In this pilot study, 14 individuals in the chronic stage of stroke participated in a visuomotor tracking task during which they produced isometric grip forces. Visual feedback displayed on a monitor helped participants track eight distinct forces ranging effort level from 4 to 30% maximum voluntary contraction (MVC). A specialized method of toggling between veridical and nonveridical visual feedback isolated each participant's realtime slacking rate at each of the eight effort levels, with both their contralesional and ipsilesional hand. Below 10-15% MVC, participants did not slack. At higher effort levels, participants slacked, and their slacking rate increased non-linearly with effort. Slacking took the form of smooth reductions in grip force. On average, across participants, slacking rates were remarkably similar between hands, just marginally faster with the contralesional hand. However, individualized slacking rates varied from almost zero to approximately double the acrossparticipant average. The paradigm for measuring slacking rate, used here, might be incorporated into robot-mediated therapy to maintain an accurate, individualized estimate of a patient's slacking rate at various force levels and ensure the robot provides assistance only as needed.


Subject(s)
Stroke Rehabilitation , Stroke , Hand Strength , Humans , Isometric Contraction , Pilot Projects , Survivors
5.
J Neurophysiol ; 120(4): 2107-2120, 2018 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30089024

ABSTRACT

During trial-to-trial movement adaptation, the motor system systematically reduces extraneous muscle forces when kinematic errors experienced on previous movements are small, a phenomenon termed "slacking." There is also growing evidence that the motor system slacks continuously (i.e., in real-time) during arm movement or grip force control, but the initiation of this slacking is not well-characterized, obfuscating its physiological cause. Here, we addressed this issue by asking participants ( n = 32) to track discrete force targets presented visually using isometric grip force, then applying a brief, subtle error-clamp to that visual feedback on random trials. Participants reduced their force in an exponential fashion, on these error-clamp trials, except when the target force was <10% maximum voluntary contraction (MVC). This force drift began <250 ms after the onset of the error-clamp, consistent with slacking being an ongoing process unmasked immediately after the motor system finished reacting to the last veridical feedback. Above 10% MVC, the slacking rate increased linearly with grip force magnitude. Grip force variation was approximately 50-100% higher with veridical feedback, largely due to heightened signal power at ~1 Hz, the band of visuomotor feedback control. Finally, the slacking rate measured for each participant during error-clamp trials correlated with their force variation during control trials. That is, participants who slacked more had greater force variation. These results suggest that real-time slacking continuously reduces grip force until visual error prompts correction. Whereas such slacking is suited for force minimization, it may also account for ~30% of the variability in personal grip force variation. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We provide evidence that a form of slacking continuously conditions real-time grip force production. This slacking is well-suited to promote efficiency but is expected to increase force variation by triggering additional feedback corrections. Moreover, we show that the rate at which a person slacks is substantially correlated with the variation of their grip force. In combination, at the neurophysiological level, our results suggest slacking is caused by one or more relatively smooth neural adaptations.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological , Hand Strength , Biological Variation, Individual , Feedback, Physiological , Female , Humans , Isometric Contraction , Male , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Young Adult
6.
Assist Technol ; 30(5): 281-288, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28506153

ABSTRACT

Lever-drive wheelchairs lower physical strain but are less maneuverable than push-rim wheelchairs. Here, we study a possible solution in which the user simultaneously actuates clutches mounted between the levers and wheels each stroke via a clutch handle attached to one lever; this solution is of particular interest for user groups with only one functional hand. First, to demonstrate maneuverability, we show how this "yoked clutch" allows an experienced user to maneuver a constrained space. Then, we compared the difficulty of learning a yoked clutch chair to a conventional lever-drive transmission (i.e. a one-way bearing). Twenty-two unimpaired novice adults navigated a figure-eight track during six training sessions over two weeks. Participant mean speed improved roughly 60% for both chairs, with similar exponential improvement time constants (3 days) and final speeds. However, speed improvement mostly took place overnight rather than within the session for hand-clutching, and the physiological cost index was also about 40% higher. These results indicate that while hand-clutching is no more difficult to learn than a lever-drive, it is reliant on overnight improvement. Also, its increased maneuverability comes with decreased efficiency. We discuss how the yoked clutch may be particularly well suited for individuals with stroke during inpatient rehabilitation.


Subject(s)
Hand/physiology , Stroke Rehabilitation/instrumentation , Wheelchairs , Adult , Biomechanical Phenomena/physiology , Equipment Design , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Male , Young Adult
7.
IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot ; 2017: 50-55, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28813792

ABSTRACT

Many people with a stroke have a severely paretic arm, and it is often assumed that they are unable to learn novel, skilled behaviors that incorporate use of that arm. Here, we show that a group of people with chronic stroke (n = 5, upper extremity Fugl-Meyer scores: 31, 30, 26, 22, 8) learned to use their impaired arm to propel a novel, yoked-clutch lever drive wheelchair. Over six daily training sessions, each involving about 134 training movements with their "useless" arm, the users gradually achieved a 3-fold increase in wheelchair speed on average, with a 4-6 fold increase for three of the participants. They did this by learning a bimanual skill: pushing the levers with both arms while activating the yoked-clutches at the right time with their ipsilesional (i.e. "good") hand to propel the wheelchair forward. They perceived the task as highly motivating and useful. The speed improvements exceeded a 1.5-factor improvement observed when young, unimpaired users learned to propel the chair. The learning rate also exceeded a sample of learning rates from a variety of classic learning studies. These results suggest that appropriately-designed assistive technologies (or "unmasking technologies - UTs") can unleash a powerful, latent ability for motor learning even for severely paretic arms. While UTs may not reduce clinical impairment, they may facilitate large improvements in a specific functional ability.


Subject(s)
Arm/physiopathology , Learning/physiology , Motor Skills/physiology , Stroke Rehabilitation/methods , Wheelchairs , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Recovery of Function , Self-Help Devices , Stroke Rehabilitation/instrumentation
8.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25571188

ABSTRACT

Individuals with severe arm impairment after stroke are thought to be unable to use a manual wheelchair in the conventional bimanual fashion, because they cannot grip and push the pushrim with their impaired hand. Instead, they are often taught to propel a wheelchair with their good arm and leg, a compensatory strategy that encourages disuse and may cause asymmetric tone. Here, we show that four stroke survivors (9, 27 50 and 16 months post stroke) with severe arm impairment (upper extremity Fugl Meyer scores of 21, 17, 16 and 15 of 66 respectively) were able to propel themselves overground during ten, 3.3 meter movement trials, using a specially designed lever-driven wheelchair adapted with a splint and elastic bands. Their average speed on the tenth trial was about 0.1 m/sec. These results suggest that individuals with stroke could use bimanual wheelchair propulsion for mobility, both avoiding the problems associated with good-arm/good-leg propulsion and increasing the number of daily arm movements they achieve, which may improve arm movement recovery.


Subject(s)
Arm/physiopathology , Stroke Rehabilitation , Wheelchairs , Feasibility Studies , Humans , Movement , Severity of Illness Index
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