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1.
J Neuroeng Rehabil ; 21(1): 117, 2024 Jul 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39003469

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Falls due to stumbling are prevalent for transfemoral prosthesis users and may lead to increased injury risk. This preliminary case series analyzes the transfemoral prosthesis user stumble recovery response to highlight key deficits in current commercially-available prostheses and proposes potential interventions to improve recovery outcomes. METHODS: Six transfemoral prosthesis users were perturbed on their prosthetic limb at least three times while walking on a treadmill using obstacle perturbations in early, mid and late swing. Kinematic data were collected to characterize the response, while fall rate and key kinematic recovery metrics were used to assess the quality of recovery and highlight functional deficits in current commercially-available prostheses. RESULTS: Across all participants, 13 (54%) of the 24 trials resulted in a fall (defined as > 50% body-weight support) with all but one participant (83%) falling at least once and two participants (33%) falling every time. In contrast, in a previous study of seven young, unimpaired, non-prosthesis users using the same experimental apparatus, no falls occurred across 190 trials. For the transfemoral prosthesis users, early swing had the highest rate of falling at 64%, followed by mid-swing at 57%, and then late swing at 33%. The trend in falls was mirrored by the kinematic recovery metrics (peak trunk angle, peak trunk angular velocity, forward reach of the perturbed limb, and knee angle at ground contact). In early swing all four metrics were deficient compared to non-prosthesis user controls. In mid swing, all but trunk angular velocity were deficient. In late swing only forward reach was deficient. CONCLUSION: Based on the stumble recovery responses, four potential deficiencies were identified in the response of the knee prostheses: (1) insufficient resistance to stance knee flexion upon ground contact; (2) insufficient swing extension after a perturbation; (3) difficulty initiating swing flexion following a perturbation; and (4) excessive impedance against swing flexion in early swing preventing the potential utilization of the elevating strategy. Each of these issues can potentially be addressed by mechanical or mechatronic changes to prosthetic design to improve quality of recovery and reduce the likelihood a fall.


Assuntos
Acidentes por Quedas , Membros Artificiais , Humanos , Acidentes por Quedas/prevenção & controle , Membros Artificiais/efeitos adversos , Masculino , Feminino , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Adulto , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Caminhada/fisiologia , Fêmur/fisiologia , Amputados/reabilitação , Marcha/fisiologia
2.
IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot ; 2023: 1-6, 2023 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37941231

RESUMO

Exploring how foot placement relates to center-of-mass kinematics after unexpected disturbances for healthy adults could improve our understanding of human balance as well as inform the design/control of assistive device interventions to reduce fall risk. Therefore, in this work a kinematic dataset of stumble recovery responses from seven healthy adults was analyzed to investigate the effects of stumble perturbations on COM state, and the COM state's relationship to various foot placement metrics. COM velocity excursion after trips was significantly higher than excursion for unperturbed swing phases, increasing linearly as the trip occurred later in swing phase. Step length/width and foot position at heel-strike after the trip both increased with COM velocity at heel-strike, though weaker fits for foot positions suggest priority to other strategies. Swing durations were substantially longer for tripped swing phases versus normal swing phases and increased with COM velocity. This is the first investigation of these relationships for stumble recovery, and their alignment (or lack thereof) with previous models provides insights into the control of balance for this common daily-life disturbance.


Assuntos
Marcha , Caminhada , Adulto , Humanos , Caminhada/fisiologia , Marcha/fisiologia , Pé/fisiologia , Calcanhar , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Equilíbrio Postural
3.
Wearable Technol ; 4: e22, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38510587

RESUMO

Falls due to stumbles are a major cause of injury for many populations, and as such interventions to reduce fall risk have been a key focus of rehabilitation research. However, dedicated stumble recovery assistance in a powered lower-limb exoskeleton has yet to be explored as a fall mitigation intervention. Thus young, healthy adults () were recruited for a stumble recovery experiment to test the efficacy of knee exoskeleton stumble recovery assistance in improving an impaired stumble recovery response (i.e., the elevating strategy response). Leg weights were attached unilaterally to each participant's shank to simulate walking and stumble recovery impairment, and a unilateral powered knee exoskeleton was worn on the same leg for walking and stumble recovery assistance. Ultimately, knee exoskeleton stumble recovery assistance served to improve participants' elevating limb kinematics (i.e., increase thigh and knee motion) and reduce overall fall risk (i.e., reduce trunk motion and improve foot placement) during responses relative to their impaired response (i.e., with the leg weights and no assistance), and relative to their response while receiving only walking assistance. This initial exploration provides a first indication that knee exoskeleton stumble recovery assistance is a viable approach to improving an impaired stumble recovery response, which could serve two important use cases: (1) a safety mechanism for existing exoskeleton wearers, who may be less capable of recovering from stumbles due to the added weight or joint impedance of the device; (2) an external stumble recovery aid for fall-prone populations, such as the elderly or stroke survivors.

4.
Top Spinal Cord Inj Rehabil ; 29(Suppl): 15-22, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38174129

RESUMO

Background: Despite the positive results in upper limb (UL) motor recovery after using electrical neuromodulation in individuals after cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) or stroke, there has been limited exploration of potential benefits of combining task-specific hand grip training with transcutaneous electrical spinal stimulation (TSS) for individuals with UL paralysis. Objectives: This study investigates the combinatorial effects of task-specific hand grip training and noninvasive TSS to enhance hand motor output after paralysis. Methods: Four participants with cervical SCI classified as AIS A and B and two participants with cerebral stroke were recruited in this study. The effects of cervical TSS without grip training and during training with sham stimulation were contrasted with hand grip training with TSS. TSS was applied at midline over cervical spinal cord. During hand grip training, 5 to 10 seconds of voluntary contraction were repeated at a submaximum strength for approximately 10 minutes, three days per week for 4 weeks. Signals from hand grip dynamometer along with the electromyography (EMG) activity from UL muscles were recorded and displayed as visual feedback. Results: Our case study series demonstrated that combined task-specific hand grip training and cervical TSS targeting the motor pools of distal muscles in the UL resulted in significant improvements in maximum hand grip strength. However, TSS alone or hand grip training alone showed limited effectiveness in improving grip strength. Conclusion: Task-specific hand grip training combined with TSS can result in restoration of hand motor function in paralyzed upper limbs in individuals with cervical SCI and stroke.


Assuntos
Traumatismos da Medula Espinal , Acidente Vascular Cerebral , Humanos , Força da Mão/fisiologia , Paralisia , Extremidade Superior
5.
J Neuroeng Rehabil ; 19(1): 101, 2022 09 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36151561

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Transfemoral prosthesis users' high fall rate is related to increased injury risk, medical costs, and fear of falling. Better understanding how stumble conditions (e.g., participant age, prosthesis type, side tripped, and swing phase of perturbation) affect transfemoral prosthesis users could provide insight into response deficiencies and inform fall prevention interventions. METHODS: Six unilateral transfemoral prosthesis users experienced obstacle perturbations to their sound limb in early, mid, and late swing phase. Fall outcome, recovery strategy, and kinematics of each response were recorded to characterize (1) recoveries versus falls for transfemoral prosthesis users and (2) prosthesis user recoveries versus healthy adult recoveries. RESULTS: Out of 26 stumbles, 15 resulted in falls with five of six transfemoral prosthesis users falling at least once. By contrast, in a previously published study of seven healthy adults comprising 214 stumbles using the same experimental apparatus, no participants fell. The two oldest prosthesis users fell after every stumble, stumbles in mid swing resulted in the most falls, and prosthesis type was not related to strategy/fall outcomes. Prosthesis users who recovered used the elevating strategy in early swing, lowering strategy in late swing, and elevating or lowering/delayed lowering with hopping in mid swing, but exhibited increased contralateral (prosthetic-side) thigh abduction and trunk flexion relative to healthy controls. Falls occurred if the tripped (sound) limb did not reach ample thigh/knee flexion to sufficiently clear the obstacle in the elevating step, or if the prosthetic limb did not facilitate a successful step response after the initial sound-side elevating or lowering step. Such responses generally led to smaller step lengths, less anterior foot positioning, and more forward trunk flexion/flexion velocity in the resulting foot-strikes. CONCLUSIONS: Introducing training (e.g., muscle strength or task-specific motor skill) and/or modifying assistive devices (e.g., lower-limb prostheses or exoskeletons) may improve responses for transfemoral prosthesis users. Specifically, training or exoskeleton assistance could help facilitate sufficient thigh/knee flexion for elevating; training or prosthesis assistance could provide support-limb counteracting torques to aid in elevating; and training or prosthesis assistance could help initiate and safely complete prosthetic swing.


Assuntos
Membros Artificiais , Medo , Adulto , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Marcha/fisiologia , Humanos , Caminhada/fisiologia
6.
J Biomech Eng ; 144(3)2022 03 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34505139

RESUMO

This paper describes the design of a simple and low-cost compliant low-profile prosthetic foot based on a cantilevered beam of uniform strength. The prosthetic foot is developed such that the maximum stress experienced by the beam is distributed approximately evenly across the length of the beam. Due to this stress distribution, the prosthetic foot exhibits compliant behavior not achievable through standard design approaches (e.g., designs based on simple cantilevered beams). Additionally, due to its simplicity and use of flat structural members, the foot can be manufactured at low cost. An analytical model of the compliant behavior of the beam is developed that facilitates rapid design changes to vary foot size and stiffness. A characteristic prototype was designed and constructed to be used in both a benchtop quasi-static loading test as well as a dynamic walking test for validation. The model predicted the rotational stiffness of the prototype with 5% error. Furthermore, the prototype foot was tested alongside two commercially available prosthetic feet (a low profile foot and an energy storage and release foot) in level walking experiments with a single study participant. The prototype foot displayed the lowest stiffness of the three feet (6.0, 7.1, and 10.4 Nm/deg for the prototype foot, the commercial low profile foot, and the energy storage and release foot, respectively). This foot design approach and accompanying model may allow for compliant feet to be developed for individuals with long residual limbs.


Assuntos
Membros Artificiais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Marcha , Humanos , Extremidade Inferior , Desenho de Prótese , Caminhada
7.
J Biomech Eng ; 143(7)2021 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33590838

RESUMO

Healthy adults employ one of three primary strategies to recover from stumble perturbations-elevating, lowering, or delayed lowering. The basis upon which each recovery strategy is selected is not known. Though strategy selection is often associated with swing percentage at which the perturbation occurs, swing percentage does not fully predict strategy selection; it is not a physical quantity; and it is not strictly a real-time measurement. The objective of this work is to better describe the basis of strategy selection in healthy individuals during stumble events, and in particular to identify a set of real-time measurable, physical quantities that better predict stumble recovery strategy selection, relative to swing percentage. To do this, data from a prior seven-participant stumble experiment were reanalyzed. A set of biomechanical measurements at/after the perturbation were taken and considered in a two-stage classification structure to find the set of measurements (i.e., features) that best explained the strategy selection process. For Stage 1 (decision between initially elevating or lowering of the leg), the proposed model correctly predicted 99.0% of the strategies used, compared to 93.6% with swing percentage. For Stage 2 (decision between elevating or delayed lowering of the leg), the model correctly predicted 94.0% of the strategies used, compared to 85.6% with swing percentage. This model uses dynamic factors of the human body to predict strategy with substantially improved accuracy relative to swing percentage, giving potential insight into human physiology as well as potentially better informing the design of fall-prevention interventions.


Assuntos
Marcha
8.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33400653

RESUMO

This paper describes a semi-powered ankle prosthesis and corresponding unified controller that provides biomimetic behavior for level and sloped walking without requiring identification of ground slope or modulation of control parameters. The controller is based on the observation that healthy individuals maintain an invariant external quasi-stiffness (spring like behavior between the shank and ground) when walking on level and sloped terrain. Emulating an invariant external quasi-stiffness requires an ankle that can vary the set-point (i.e., equilibrium angle) of the ankle stiffness. A semi-powered ankle prosthesis that incorporates a novel constant-volume power-asymmetric actuator was developed to provide this behavior, and the unified controller was implemented on it. The device and unified controller were assessed on three subjects with transtibial amputations while walking on inclines, level ground, and declines. Experimental results suggest that the prosthesis and accompanying controller can provide a consistent external quasi-stiffness similar to healthy subjects across all tested ground slopes.


Assuntos
Amputados , Membros Artificiais , Tornozelo , Articulação do Tornozelo , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Humanos , Desenho de Prótese , Caminhada
9.
J Neuroeng Rehabil ; 16(1): 69, 2019 06 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31182126

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The experimental study of stumble recovery is essential to better understanding the reflexive mechanisms that help prevent falls as well as the deficiencies in fall-prone populations. This study would benefit from a system that can introduce perturbations that: 1) are realistic (e.g., obstacle disrupting the foot in swing phase), 2) are unanticipated by subjects, 3) are controllable in their timing, and 4) allow for kinematic and kinetic evaluation. METHODS: A stumble perturbation system was designed that consists of an obstacle delivery apparatus that releases an obstacle onto a force-instrumented treadmill and a predictive targeting algorithm which controls the timing of the perturbation to the foot during swing phase. Seven healthy subjects were recruited to take part in an experimental protocol for system validation, which consisted of two sub-experiments. First, a perception experiment determined whether subjects could perceive the obstacle as it slid onto the treadmill belt. Second, a perturbation experiment assessed the timing accuracy of perturbations relative to a target percent swing input by the experimenter. Data from this experiment were then used to demonstrate that joint kinematics and kinetics could be computed before and after the perturbation. RESULTS: Out of 168 perception trials (24 per subject), not a single obstacle was perceived entering the treadmill by the subjects. Out of 196 perturbation trials, 190 trials successfully induced a stumble event, with a mean targeting accuracy, relative to the desired percent swing, of 25 ms (6.2% of swing phase). Joint kinematic and kinetic results were then computed for three common stumble recovery strategies and shown to be qualitatively consistent with results from prior stumble studies conducted overground. CONCLUSIONS: The stumble perturbation system successfully introduced realistic obstacle perturbations that were unanticipated by subjects. The targeting accuracy substantially reduced mistrials (i.e., trials that did not elicit a stumble) compared to previous studies. This accuracy enables stumble recovery to be studied more systematically as a function of when the perturbation occurs during swing phase. Lastly, joint kinematic and kinetic estimates allow for a comprehensive analysis of stumble recovery biomechanics.


Assuntos
Acidentes por Quedas , Algoritmos , Especialidade de Fisioterapia/instrumentação , Equilíbrio Postural , Acidentes por Quedas/prevenção & controle , Adulto , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Feminino , Marcha , Humanos , Masculino , Caminhada
10.
Bioanalysis ; 4(11): 1311-26, 2012 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22720650

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In recent years, there has been a growing interest in automating small-molecule bioanalytical sample preparations specifically using the Hamilton MicroLab(®) STAR liquid-handling platform. In the most extensive work reported thus far, multiple small-molecule sample preparation assay types (protein precipitation extraction, SPE and liquid-liquid extraction) have been integrated into a suite that is composed of graphical user interfaces and Hamilton scripts. Using that suite, bioanalytical scientists have been able to automate various sample preparation methods to a great extent. However, there are still areas that could benefit from further automation, specifically, the full integration of analytical standard and QC sample preparation with study sample extraction in one continuous run, real-time 2D barcode scanning on the Hamilton deck and direct Laboratory Information Management System database connectivity. RESULTS: We developed a new small-molecule sample-preparation automation system that improves in all of the aforementioned areas. CONCLUSION: The improved system presented herein further streamlines the bioanalytical workflow, simplifies batch run design, reduces analyst intervention and eliminates sample-handling error.


Assuntos
Software , Automação , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Extração Líquido-Líquido/normas , Espectrometria de Massas , Preparações Farmacêuticas/análise , Preparações Farmacêuticas/normas , Farmacocinética , Proteínas/química , Proteínas/metabolismo , Controle de Qualidade , Extração em Fase Sólida/normas
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