| Literature DB >> 23304507 |
Alan J Pearce1, Brooke Adair, Kimberly Miller, Elizabeth Ozanne, Catherine Said, Nick Santamaria, Meg E Morris.
Abstract
Given the rapidly ageing population, interest is growing in robots to enable older people to remain living at home. We conducted a systematic review and critical evaluation of the scientific literature, from 1990 to the present, on the use of robots in aged care. The key research questions were as follows: (1) what is the range of robotic devices available to enable older people to remain mobile, independent, and safe? and, (2) what is the evidence demonstrating that robotic devices are effective in enabling independent living in community dwelling older people? Following database searches for relevant literature an initial yield of 161 articles was obtained. Titles and abstracts of articles were then reviewed by 2 independent people to determine suitability for inclusion. Forty-two articles met the criteria for question 1. Of these, 4 articles met the criteria for question 2. Results showed that robotics is currently available to assist older healthy people and people with disabilities to remain independent and to monitor their safety and social connectedness. Most studies were conducted in laboratories and hospital clinics. Currently limited evidence demonstrates that robots can be used to enable people to remain living at home, although this is an emerging smart technology that is rapidly evolving.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23304507 PMCID: PMC3529482 DOI: 10.1155/2012/538169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Res ISSN: 2090-2204
Figure 1Yield of articles for the robotics literature.
Studies for question 1.
| First Author/year | Study Design | Evidence Level [ | Duration | Setting | Country | Sample size | Age mean | Age range | Characteristics | Gender | Sampling | Technology | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | F | |||||||||||||
| Aisen [ | Intervention study | III-1 | Overall duration not stated. Robot trained 4-5 hrs/wk on top of conventional training. Sham trained 1-2 sessions/wk | Hospital rehabilitation clinic | USA | 20 | § | Robot trained—45–68; Sham trained—38–72 | Post-stroke, hemiplegia | 11 | 9 | Pseudorandomised | “MIT-MANUS” | Robotic upper limb exoskeleton. |
| Morvan [ | Qualitative study | IV | <1 mnth | § | France | 28 | § | § | Young with either tetraplegia, myopathies or spasticity | # | Not stated | “MASTER” robotic arm system | Psychological preparedness by older people for robots. | |
| Krebs [ | Intervention study | III-1 | Overall duration not stated. Robot trained 4-5 hrs/wk on top of conventional training. Sham trained 1 sessions/wk | Hospital rehabilitation clinic | USA | 20 | Robot trained—58.5; Sham trained—63 | § | § | # | Pseudorandomised | “MIT-MANUS” | Robotic upper limb exoskeleton. | |
| Cozens [ | Intervention study | III-3 | <1 d | Laboratory | England | 10 | § | 47–69 | Stroke or MS with upper limb weakness | # | Pseudorandomised | No name provided | Robotic upper limb apparatus. | |
| Volpe [ | Intervention study | III-1 | 1 wk treatment, 3 yr follow-up | Hospital rehabilitation clinic | USA | 20 total, 12 of 20 measureat 3 yrs | Robot trained—54 ± 3 Sham trained—66 ± 2 | § | Post-stroke | 7 | 5 | Pseudorandomised | “MIT-MANUS” | Robotic upper limb exoskeleton. |
| Reinkensmeyer [ | Intervention study | III-3 | <1 d | § | USA | 5 | § | 24–79 | Brain injury (TBA/ABI) | # | Convenience | Robotic arm | Arm guidance system. | |
|
Burgar[ | Intervention study (x3) | III-2 | 1 wk–2 mnths | Laboratory | USA | 24 | § | 21–80 | Post-stroke hemiplegia | # | Convenience | MIME | Mirror Image Motion Enabler (MIME). | |
| Volpe [ | Intervention study | III-1 | 25 × 1 hr sessions | Hospital rehabilitation clinic | USA | 56 | 64.5 | 27–83 | Post-stroke hemiplegia | 30 | 26 | Randomised control | “MIT-MANUS” | Robotic upper limb exoskeleton. |
| Jezernik [ | Intervention study | III-3 | 2 × 1 hr sessions | Spinal cord injury clinic | Switzerland | 6 | § | 38–73 | Spinal cord | # | § | “Lokomat” | Robotic gait exoskeleton. | |
| Loureiro [ | Intervention study | III-3 | 9 sessions over 3 wks | Hospital | England | 30 | § | § | Stroke hemiplegia | # | Randomised control | “GENTLE/S” | Haptic upper limb system. | |
| Rentschler [ | Technical report | IV | <1 d | Laboratory | USA | 1 | 29 | 29 | Healthy | 1 | — | Case study | PAMA | Personal adaptive mobility aid (PAMA). |
| Winchester [ | Other | III-3 | 12 wks | Laboratory | USA | 4 | § | 20–49 | Spinal cord injury | 4 | — | Convenience | “Lokomat” | Robotic gait exoskeleton. |
| Spenko [ | Other | III-3 | <1 d | Laboratory | USA | 6 | § | 85–95 | Healthy older | 1 | 5 | Convenience | “Smartcane” and “Smart walker” | Walking aid for mobility and monitoring. |
|
Isreal[ | Other | III-3 | 5 sessions | Laboratory | USA | 12 | § | 15–59 | Spinal cord injury | # | Convenience | “Lokomat” | Robotic gait exoskeleton. | |
|
Mehrholz[ | Systematic review | I | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | Assisted gait device | Robotic-assisted gait training. | |
| Rocon [ | Other | III-3 | <1 d | Laboratory | Spain | 10 | 52.3 | § | Tremor | 7 | 3 | Convenience | “WOTAS” | Robotic exoskeleton to reduce arm tremor. |
| Saeki [ | Other | IV | 6 mnths | Laboratory | Japan | 1 | 48 | n/a | Neuro-logical | — | 1 | N/a | “Bi-Manu-Track” | Robotic arm trainer. |
| Hidler [ | Intervention study | III-2 | 6 mnths | Laboratory | USA | 5 | 44.1 | 24–59 | Spinal cord injury | # | Randomised control | “Lokomat” | Robotic gait exoskeleton. | |
| Janssen and Pringle [ | Intervention study | III-3 | 6 wks | Laboratory | USA | 12 | 36 | 20–70 | Spinal cord injury | 12 | — | Convenience | “ERGYS 1” | Functional electrical stimulator leg ergometry. |
| Krebs [ | Intervention study | III-2 | 6 wks | Rehabilitation clinic | USA | 47 | 57.5 | 27–79 | Stroke | # | Pre-post single group | “MIT-MANUS” | Robotic hand visuomotorguidancesystem. | |
| Patton [ | Other | n/a | n/a | n/a | USA | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | “KineAssist” | Discussion paper on robot to improve balance and gait. | |
| Querry [ | Intervention study | III-2 | <1 d | Laboratory | USA | 26 | 35.5 | § | Spinal cord injury | 17 | 9 | Non-randomised control | “Lokomat” | Robotic gait exoskeleton. |
| Rentschler [ | Intervention study | III-2 | 1 d | Laboratory | USA | 17 | 85.3 | § | Healthy | # | Pseudorandomised | “GUIDO” | Robotic walker. | |
| Galluppi [ | Intervention study | IV | § | Hospital | Italy | § | § | § | § | # | § | Robotic wheelchair | Collaborative control robotic wheelchair. | |
| Shimada [ | Intervention study | III-2 | <6 mths | Retirement village | Japan | 15 | 78.3 | 72–85 | Healthy | 0 | 15 | Convenience | Stride assistance system | Robotic exoskeleton stride assistance system to assist with walking but provide resistance for physical improvement. |
| Flinn [ | Case study | IV | 6 wks | Hospital | USA | 1 | 48 | n/a | Post-stroke | n/a | n/a | “InMotion2” | Upper limb visuomotor guidance system. | |
| Zeng [ | Intervention study | IV | § | Hospital rehabilitation clinic | Singapore | 3 | § | 16–48 | Cerebral palsy/TBI | # | Convenience | Robotic wheelchair | Collaborative control robotic wheelchair. | |
| Lo [ | Intervention study | II | 12 weeks (total of 36 hours training) | Multi-rehabilitation centres | USA | 127 | 64.6 | § | >6 months post-stroke | 122 | 5 | Random control trial | Modular robotic system (no name) for upper arm guidance. | Modular robotic upper arm guidance system for shoulder, forearm, wrist, and grasping movements. |
|
Frizera Neto[ | Intervention study | III-3 | <1 d | Indoor installation | Spain | 5 | § | § | Healthy | # | Convenience | “SIMBIOSIS” | Robotic walker—upper body force interaction. | |
| Sharma [ | Intervention study | III-3 | <1 d | Laboratory | USA | 19 | 38.5 | § | Healthy | 13 | 6 | Convenience | “Drive Safe” smart wheelchairs | Joystick driven, sensor controlled wheelchairs. |
| Wolpaw [ | Expert opinion | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | Brain-computer interfaces | Opinion based article on the progression in brain-computer interfaces and suggestions on where the technology paradigm should progress. | |
| Galvez [ | Intervention study | III-3 | n/a | Laboratory | USA | 4 | § | 24–62 | Spinal cord injury | # | Convenience | Sensor orthoses | Robotic body-weight support treadmill. | |
| Turiel [ | Intervention study | III-3 | 1 hr/d, 5 d/wk, 30–45 mins/session | Laboratory | Italy | 14 | 50.6 | n/a | Spinal cord injury | 10 | 4 | Pre-post single group | “Lokomat” | Robotic gait exoskeleton. |
| Schwartz [ | Intervention study | III-3 | 2-3 times/wk, | Rehabilitaion clinic | Israel | 28 | 42 | n/a | Spinal cord injury | 18 | 10 | Single group, matched historical control | “Lokomat” | Robotic gait exoskeleton. |
|
Conroy[ | Intervention study | II | 60 mins, 3 times/wk for 6 wks | Laboratory | USA | 62 | 57.8 | n/a | Stroke, hemiplegia upper limb | 34 | 28 | Random control trial | “InMotion2” | Upper limb visuomotor guidance system. 2D versus 3D including antigravity training, comparing the combination of vertical and planar robot with planar alone. |
|
Carlson and Demiris[ | Intervention study | III-2 | <1 d, 2 × 40 min sessions | Simulated home | England | 21 | § | 17–47 | Healthy | # | Convenience | No name | Collaborative controlled robotic wheelchair. | |
#No gender given, §Not given.
Quality evaluation of data driven studies for question 2.
| First Author/year | Design | Evidence Level [ | Duration | Dosage | Setting | Country | Sample size | Age mean | Age range | Characteristics | Gender | Sampling | Key DV | Key measure | Results | Score (max27)* [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | F | ||||||||||||||||
| Spenko [ | Pilot Intervention study | IV | § | § | Residential care | USA | “several” | § | § | § | § | § | § | Distance from wall in meters before the smart-walker changed direction | Motor performance | Good performance outcome using both PAMM technologies. Subjective measures gave less confidence in robotic-controlled walkers to manually controlled walkers. | 4 |
| Saeki [ | Case study | IV | <6 mths | 20 mins 2 d/wk for 4 mths | Home | Japan | 1 | 48 | § | Neurological | 0 | 1 | § | Oxygenated/ deoxygenated/ total haemoglobin level in motor cortex assessed by fMRI technique | Motor assessment scale (modified Ashworth Scale) | Improvement in modified Ashworth motor assessment scale (2 to 5); reduced score on modified Ashworth scale (3 to 2); no change in wrist and fine motor tasks; direct activation of motor area in affected hemisphere. | 4 |
| Shimada [ | Intervention study | III-2 | <6 mths | 2 × 90 mins/wk for 3 mths | Retirement village | Japan | 15 | 78.3 | 72–85 | Healthy | 0 | 15 | Conven-ience | Walking speed | 5 m walk test | Increase in walking speed; reduction in energy consumption (lower glucose metabolism) | 12 |
| Carlson and Demiris [ | Intervention study | III-2 | <1 d | 2 × 40 mins | Simulated “home” environment | England | 21 | § | 17–47 | Healthy | § | § | Conven-ience | Wheel-chair control around a simulated home environment | Collision and cognitive perception | Less collisions with robotic assistance and lower scores on perceptions of concentration | 13 |
§Not given.
*The last question of the Downs and Black assessment tool was excluded due to ambiguity of the question. This meant that the maximum score possible was 27.