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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38082723

ABSTRACT

Artificial sensory feedback via electrocutaneous stimulation can be used to assist or rehabilitate stroke survivors with sensory deficits. Conveying the magnitude of tactile stimuli is an important aspect of artificial sensory feedback. Here, we explore how stroke-related sensory deficits impact the ability of electrocutaneous stimulation to convey the magnitude of tactile stimuli. Using classical psychophysical methods, we quantified the threshold of detection and the just-noticeable difference of electrocutaneous stimulation current in five stroke survivors with unilateral sensory deficits. We show significantly greater (40%) stimulation currents are needed for initial perception on the paretic hand compared to the non-paretic hand. We also show significantly greater percent changes in stimulation current (140%) are needed for reliable incremental perception on the paretic hand compared to the non-paretic hand. Lastly, we show little correlation between electrocutaneous discrimination performance and clinical sensory assessments of light-touch and spatial mechanoperception. These findings can help guide the implementation of artificial sensory feedback as an assistive or rehabilitative intervention for individuals experiencing sensory loss after a stroke.Clinical Relevance- Our results can help guide the implementation of electrical stimulation as an assistive or rehabilitative intervention for individuals with sensory loss after stroke.


Subject(s)
Electric Stimulation Therapy , Stroke Rehabilitation , Stroke , Humans , Hand , Stroke/complications , Touch/physiology
2.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 3469, 2023 03 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36859464

ABSTRACT

Most neural stimulators do not have a high enough compliance voltage to pass current through the skin. The few stimulators that meet the high compliance voltage necessary for transcutaneous stimulation are typically large benchtop units that are not portable, and the stimulation waveforms cannot be readily customized. To address this, we present the design and validation of a portable, programmable, multichannel, noninvasive neural stimulator that can generate three custom bipolar waveforms at ± 150 V with microsecond temporal resolution. The design is low-cost, open-source, and validated on the benchtop and with a healthy population to demonstrate its functionality for sensory and motor stimulation. Sensory stimulation included electrocutaneous stimulation targeting cutaneous mechanoreceptors at the surface of the skin and transcutaneous nerve stimulation targeting the median nerve at the wrist. Both electrocutaneous stimulation on the hand and transcutaneous stimulation at the wrist can elicit isolated tactile percepts on the hand but changes in pulse frequency are more discriminable for electrocutaneous stimulation. Also, neuromuscular electrical stimulation of the flexor digiti profundus is evoked by applying electrical stimulation directly above the muscle in the forearm and to the median and ulnar nerves in the upper arm. Muscle and nerve stimulation evoked similar grip forces and force rise times, but nerve stimulation had a significantly slower fatigue rate. The development and validation of this noninvasive stimulator and direct comparison of common sensory and motor stimulation targets in a human population constitute an important step towards more widespread use and accessibility of neural stimulation for education and research.


Subject(s)
Upper Extremity , Wrist , Humans , Afferent Pathways , Median Nerve , Ulnar Nerve
3.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2021: 6465-6469, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34892591

ABSTRACT

Multiarticulate bionic hands are now capable of recreating the endogenous movements and grip patterns of the human hand, yet amputees continue to be dissatisfied with existing control strategies. One approach towards more dexterous and intuitive control is to create a semi-autonomous bionic hand that can synergistically aid a human with complex tasks. To that end, we have developed a bionic hand that can automatically detect and grasp nearby objects with minimal force using multi-modal fingertip sensors. We evaluated performance using a fragile-object task in which participants must move an object over a barrier without applying pressure above specified thresholds. Participants completed the task under three conditions: 1) with their native hand, 2) with the bionic hand using surface electromyography control, and 3) using the semi-autonomous bionic hand. We show that the semi-autonomous hand is extremely capable of completing this dexterous task and significantly outperforms a more traditional surface-electromyography controller. Furthermore, we show that the semi-autonomous bionic hand significantly increased users' grip precision and reduced users' perceived task workload. This work constitutes an important step towards more dexterous and intuitive bionic hands and serves as a foundation for future work on shared human-machine control for intelligent bionic systems.


Subject(s)
Amputees , Bionics , Electromyography , Hand , Hand Strength , Humans
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