| Literature DB >> 29351051 |
Yukiyo Shimizu1, Hideki Kadone2, Shigeki Kubota3, Kenji Suzuki4, Kousaku Saotome4, Tomoyuki Ueno1, Tetsuya Abe5, Aiki Marushima6, Hiroki Watanabe4,6, Ayumu Endo1, Kazue Tsurumi1, Ryu Ishimoto1, Akira Matsushita7, Masao Koda5, Akira Matsumura6, Yoshiyuki Sankai8, Yasushi Hada1, Masashi Yamazaki5.
Abstract
Context: We sought to describe our experience with the Hybrid Assistive Limb® (HAL®) for active knee extension and voluntary ambulation with remaining muscle activity in a patient with complete paraplegia after spinal cord injury. Findings: A 30-year-old man with complete paraplegia used the HAL® for 1 month (10 sessions) using his remaining muscle activity, including hip flexor and upper limb activity. Electromyography was used to evaluate muscle activity of the gluteus maximus, tensor fascia lata, quadriceps femoris, and hamstring muscles in synchronization with the Vicon motion capture system. A HAL® session included a knee extension session with the hip flexor and voluntary gait with upper limb activity. After using the HAL® for one month, the patient's manual muscle hip flexor scores improved from 1/5 to 2/5 for the right and from 2/5 to 3/5 for the left knee, and from 0/5 to 1/5 for the extension of both knees. Conclusion/clinical relevance: Knee extension sessions with HAL®, and hip flexor and upper-limb-triggered HAL® ambulation seem a safe and feasible option in a patient with complete paraplegia due to spinal cord injury.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic spinal cord injury; Complete paraplegia; Gait analysis; Hybrid Assistive Limb®; Rehabilitation; Upper limb activity
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29351051 PMCID: PMC6718935 DOI: 10.1080/10790268.2017.1423267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Spinal Cord Med ISSN: 1079-0268 Impact factor: 1.985