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1.
J Neural Eng ; 21(2)2024 Apr 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38507808

RESUMO

Facial paralysis is the inability to move facial muscles thereby impairing the ability to blink and make facial expressions. Depending on the localization of the nerve malfunction it is subcategorised into central or peripheral and is usually unilateral. This leads to health deficits stemming from corneal dryness and social ostracization.Objective: Electrical stimulation shows promise as a method through which to restore the blink function and as a result improve eye health. However, it is unknown whether a real-time, myoelectrically controlled, neurostimulating device can be used as assistance to this pathological condition.Approach: We developed NEURO-BLINK, a wearable robotic system, that can detect the volitional healthy contralateral blink through electromyography and electrically stimulate the impaired subcutaneous facial nerve and orbicularis oculi muscle to compensate for lost blink function. Alongside the system, we developed a method to evaluate optimal electrode placement through the relationship between blink amplitude and injected charge.Main results: Ten patients with unilateral facial palsy were enrolled in the NEURO-BLINK study, with eight completing testing under two conditions. (1) where the stimulation was cued with an auditory signal (i.e. paced controlled) and (2) synchronized with the natural blink (i.e. myoelectrically controlled). In both scenarios, overall eye closure (distance between eyelids) and cornea coverage measured with high FPS video were found to significantly improve when measured in real-time, while no significant clinical changes were found immediately after use.Significance: This work takes steps towards the development of a portable medical device for blink restoration and facial stimulation which has the potential to improve long-term ocular health.


Assuntos
Paralisia Facial , Humanos , Biônica , Piscadela , Pálpebras/inervação , Nervo Facial
2.
IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot ; 2023: 1-6, 2023 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37941243

RESUMO

Exosuits typically provide limited mechanical support and rely on a user's residual functional ability. However, people with neurological impairments often suffer from both motor and sensory deficits that limit the assistance an exosuit can provide. To overcome these limitations, we developed the REINFORCE system, that complements the mechanical assistance provided by an exosuit, the Myosuit, with (1) functional electrical stimulation to enhance the activities of leg muscles, and (2) transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation to restore somatosensory information. It consists of a fully portable and highly modular system that can be easily adapted to the level of impairment and specific need of each participant. Technical verification with three healthy participants showed reliable synchronization between all modules of the systems in all phases of walking. Additionally, we tested the system's effectiveness in one participant with multiple sclerosis who walked overground with and without functional electrical stimulation. Results showed a slight increase in self-selected walking speed (approx. 18%) and in the peak hip flexion at late swing (approx. 12%) as well as reduced step-to-step variability of step length and step time when electrical stimulation was provided. Our findings push towards a clinical trial involving more patients to validate the effectiveness of the REINFORCE system on participants' mobility.


Assuntos
Esclerose Múltipla , Caminhada , Humanos , Caminhada/fisiologia , Perna (Membro)/fisiologia , Músculo Esquelético , Atividades Cotidianas
3.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 16696, 2022 10 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36202893

RESUMO

A non-optimal prosthesis integration into an amputee's body schema suggests some important functional and health consequences after lower limb amputation. These include low perception of a prosthesis as a part of the body, experiencing it as heavier than the natural limb, and cognitively exhausting use for users. Invasive approaches, exploiting the surgical implantation of electrodes in residual nerves, improved prosthesis integration by restoring natural and somatotopic sensory feedback in transfemoral amputees. A non-invasive alternative that avoids surgery would reduce costs and shorten certification time, significantly increasing the adoption of such systems. To explore this possibility, we compared results from a non-invasive, electro-cutaneous stimulation system to outcomes observed with the use of implants in above the knee amputees. This non-invasive solution was tested in transfemoral amputees through evaluation of their ability to perceive and recognize touch intensity and locations, or movements of a prosthesis, and its cognitive integration (through dual task performance and perceived prosthesis weight). While this managed to evoke the perception of different locations on the artificial foot, and closures of the leg, it was less performant than invasive solutions. Non-invasive stimulation induced similar improvements in dual motor and cognitive tasks compared to neural feedback. On the other hand, results demonstrate that remapped, evoked sensations are less informative and intuitive than the neural evoked somatotopic sensations. The device therefore fails to improve prosthesis embodiment together with its associated weight perception. This preliminary evaluation meaningfully highlights the drawbacks of non-invasive systems, but also demonstrates benefits when performing multiple tasks at once. Importantly, the improved dual task performance is consistent with invasive devices, taking steps towards the expedited development of a certified device for widespread use.


Assuntos
Membros Artificiais , Retroalimentação Sensorial , Amputados , Cognição , Retroalimentação , Humanos , Neuroestimuladores Implantáveis
4.
J Neural Eng ; 19(4)2022 08 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35944515

RESUMO

Objective.Lower-limb amputees suffer from a variety of health problems, including higher metabolic consumption and low mobility. These conditions are linked to the lack of a natural sensory feedback (SF) from their prosthetic device, which forces them to adopt compensatory walking strategies that increase fatigue. Recently, both invasive (i.e. requiring a surgery) and non-invasive approaches have been able to provide artificial sensations via neurostimulation, inducing multiple functional and cognitive benefits. Implants helped to improve patient mobility and significantly reduce their metabolic consumption. A wearable, non-invasive alterative that provides similar useful health benefits, would eliminate the surgery related risks and costs thereby increasing the accessibility and the spreading of such neurotechnologies.Approach.Here, we present a non-invasive SF system exploiting an optimally-calibrated (just noticeable difference-based) electro-cutaneous stimulation to encode intensity-modulated foot-ground and knee angle information personalized to the user's just noticeable perceptual threshold. This device was holistically evaluated in three transfemoral amputees by examination of metabolic consumption while walking outdoors, walking over different inclinations on a treadmill indoors, and balance maintenance in reaction to unexpected perturbation on a treadmill indoors. We then collected spatio-temporal parameters (i.e. gait dynamic and kinematics), and self-reported prosthesis confidence while the patients were walking with and without the SF.Main results.This non-invasive SF system, encoding different distinctly perceived levels of tactile and knee flexion information, successfully enabled subjects to decrease metabolic consumption while walking and increase prosthesis confidence. Remarkably, more physiological walking strategies and increased stability in response to external perturbations were observed while walking with the SF.Significance.The health benefits observed with the use of this non-invasive device, previously only observed exploiting invasive technologies, takes an important step towards the development of a practical, non-invasive alternative to restoring SF in leg amputees.


Assuntos
Amputados , Membros Artificiais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Retroalimentação , Marcha/fisiologia , Humanos , Desenho de Prótese , Caminhada/fisiologia
5.
J Neural Eng ; 19(1)2022 01 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34915454

RESUMO

Objective. Lower limb amputees suffer from a variety of functional deficits related to the absence of sensory communication between the central nervous system and the lost extremity. Indeed, they experience high risk of falls, asymmetric walking and balance, and low prosthesis embodiment, that significantly decrease their quality of life. Presently, there are no commercially available devices able to provide sensory feedback to leg amputees but recently some invasive solutions (i.e. requiring surgery) have been proposed by different research groups. However, a non-invasive effective alternative exploitable in everyday life is still missing.Approach. To address this need we developed and tested a lightweight, non-invasive, wearable technology (NeuroLegs) providing sensory (i.e. knee angle joint and tactile) feedback to the users through electro-cutaneous stimulation. Standard mechanical and electrical tests were performed to assess the safety and reliability of the technology. The NeuroLegs system was verified in terms of accuracy in measuring relevant gait parameters in healthy participants. The effectiveness of the NeuroLegs system at improving walking of three transfemoral amputees was then verified in movement laboratory tests.Main results. No mechanical failures, stable communication among system's parts and a long-lasting battery were demonstrated. A high temporal reliability was found when detecting stride features (important for the real-time configuration) with a correct match to the walking cadence in all assessed walking conditions. Finally, transfemoral amputees showed increased temporal gait symmetry and augmented confidence when walking with the sensory feedback compared to no feedback condition. Stepping outside from the lab, NeuroLegs was successfully exploited by a transfemoral amputee in CYBATHLON Global Edition 2020 in several challenging situations related to daily-living activities.Significance. Our results demonstrate that the NeuroLegs system provides the user with useful sensory information that can be successfully exploited in different walking conditions of daily life.


Assuntos
Amputados , Membros Artificiais , Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Marcha , Humanos , Perna (Membro) , Extremidade Inferior , Qualidade de Vida , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Caminhada/fisiologia
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