| Literature DB >> 32741796 |
Juan Fang1, Andres Schuwey1, Niklaus Stocker2, Brian Pedrini2, Antonio Sampaio2, Kenneth J Hunt1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To provide effective rehabilitation in the early post-injury stage, a novel robotic rehabilitation platform is proposed, which provides full-body arm-leg rehabilitation via belt actuation to severely disabled patients who are restricted to bed rest.Entities:
Keywords: Belt actuation; arm-leg movement; side-lying stepping; supine-lying stepping; whole body rehabilitation
Year: 2021 PMID: 32741796 PMCID: PMC8203225 DOI: 10.3233/THC-202392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Technol Health Care ISSN: 0928-7329 Impact factor: 1.285
Figure 1.Model development for simulation of stepping in supine-lying (a, c) and side-lying (b, d) positions.
Figure 2.Mechanical concept of the belt-actuated test rigs.
Figure 3.Two belt-actuated test rigs.
Figure 4.Human machine interface in the control program.
Figure 5.The simulated belt lengths for (a) two-position training and (b) end-effector circular training.
Figure 7.End-effector circular stepping in a supine position. (a) Hip joint; (b) knee joint; and (c) foot trajectory. Dashed lines: simulation, solid lines: experiment.
Figure 6.The simulated (a) bar length and (b) the bar angle for walking-like stepping.
Figure 10.The performance of stepping in a side-lying position. (a) Hip joint; and (b) knee joint. Sim: simulation; Exp: experiment.
Figure 8.The required torques from the two motors to compensate friction in the two-drive test rig. Exp: experiment.
Figure 9.The experimental performance of stepping in teach-replay training. (a) Hip joint; and (b) knee joint.