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Overground Walking With a Transparent Exoskeleton Shows Changes in Spatiotemporal Gait Parameters.
Andrade, Rafhael M; Sapienza, Stefano; Mohebbi, Abolfazl; Fabara, Eric E; Bonato, Paolo.
Afiliación
  • Andrade RM; Department of Mechanical EngineeringUniversidade Federal do Espirito Santo Vitória Espirito Santo 29075 Brazil.
  • Sapienza S; Department of Physical Medicine and RehabilitationHarvard Medical SchoolSpaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Charlestown MA 02129 USA.
  • Mohebbi A; Department of Physical Medicine and RehabilitationHarvard Medical SchoolSpaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Charlestown MA 02129 USA.
  • Fabara EE; Department of Mechanical EngineeringPolytechnique Montreal Montréal QC H3T 1J4 Canada.
  • Bonato P; Department of Physical Medicine and RehabilitationHarvard Medical SchoolSpaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Charlestown MA 02129 USA.
IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med ; 12: 182-193, 2024.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38088995
ABSTRACT
Lower-limb gait training (GT) exoskeletons have been successfully used in rehabilitation programs to overcome the burden of locomotor impairment. However, providing suitable net interaction torques to assist patient movements is still a challenge. Previous transparent operation approaches have been tested in treadmill-based GT exoskeletons to improve user-robot interaction. However, it is not yet clear how a transparent lower-limb GT system affects user's gait kinematics during overground walking, which unlike treadmill-based systems, requires active participation of the subjects to maintain stability. In this study, we implemented a transparent operation strategy on the ExoRoboWalker, an overground GT exoskeleton, to investigate its effect on the user's gait. The approach employs a feedback zero-torque controller with feedforward compensation for the exoskeleton's dynamics and actuators' impedance. We analyzed the data of five healthy subjects walking overground with the exoskeleton in transparent mode (ExoTransp) and non-transparent mode (ExoOff) and walking without exoskeleton (NoExo). The transparent controller reduced the user-robot interaction torque and improved the user's gait kinematics relative to ExoOff. No significant difference in stride length is observed between ExoTransp and NoExo (p = 0.129). However, the subjects showed a significant difference in cadence between ExoTransp (50.9± 1.1 steps/min) and NoExo (93.7 ± 8.7 steps/min) (p = 0.015), but not between ExoTransp and ExoOff (p = 0.644). Results suggest that subjects wearing the exoskeleton adjust their gait as in an attention-demanding task changing the spatiotemporal gait characteristics likely to improve gait balance.
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Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Dispositivo Exoesqueleto Límite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Dispositivo Exoesqueleto Límite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article