| Literature DB >> 33028354 |
Charles Lambelet1, Damir Temiraliuly2, Marc Siegenthaler2, Marc Wirth2, Daniel G Woolley2, Olivier Lambercy3, Roger Gassert3, Nicole Wenderoth2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic hand and wrist impairment are frequently present following stroke and severely limit independence in everyday life. The wrist orientates and stabilizes the hand before and during grasping, and is therefore of critical importance in activities of daily living (ADL). To improve rehabilitation outcomes, classical therapy could be supplemented by novel therapies that can be applied in unsupervised settings. This would enable more distributed practice and could potentially increase overall training dose. Robotic technology offers new possibilities to address this challenge, but it is critical that devices for independent training are easy and appealing to use. Here, we present the development, characterization and wearability evaluation of a fully portable exoskeleton for active wrist extension/flexion support in stroke rehabilitation.Entities:
Keywords: Admittance control; Donning/doffing; Home-based; Robotic rehabilitation; Stroke; Unsupervised training; Wearability/usability evaluation; Wearable exoskeleton; Wrist; eWrist
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33028354 PMCID: PMC7541267 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-020-00749-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 4.262
Fig. 1a The current version of the eWrist mounted on the right arm of a user. It is composed of three modules, namely, the forearm module, the upper arm module and the Myo armband. b The forearm module of the eWrist with two ratchet wheels (on the handle and on the forearm) to adjust the tightening tension. The locking hooks are equipped with two guiding magnets to ease the fixation. c The upper arm module of the eWrist and the four compliant gripping fingers that move inwards when the tightening wheel is turned. With the press of a button fixed to a ratchet (not shown on the picture) the tightening wheel unwinds and the fingers move outwards. d The restrained RoM from 77∘ in flexion to 77∘ in extension
Fig. 2Block diagrams. a System architecture. b Admittance controller with inner velocity control loop running at 5.36 kHz on the motor drive (ESCON). The Teensy computes the reference angular velocity according to the measured force F applied by the user on the handle and transmits it to the motor drive. The motor drive records the angular velocity of the motor shaft, combines it with the reference angular velocity reflected at the motor shaft and computes the current command for the motor thanks to an integrated PI (proportional-integral) controller. R is the reduction ratio of the gear stage (i.e. 475:1)
Summary of the technical characteristics of the eWrist
| Forearm module weight [g] | 238 |
| Upper arm module weight [g] | 224 |
| Myo armband weight [g] | 94 |
| Forearm module dimensions1 [mm] | 200 ×120×802 |
| Upper arm module dimensions1 [mm] | 120 ×1603×1253 |
| Output max. torque [Nm] | 3.7 |
| Output max. velocity [deg/s] | 5304/5205 |
| Output max. acceleration [deg/s2] | 6’5104/7’5705 |
| Force/torque range6 [N]/[Nm] | 0-50/0-4 |
| Force/torque resolution [mN]/[mNm] | 7.3/0.58 |
| Angular position resolution [deg] | 0.058 |
| Angular velocity resolution [rpm] | configurable |
| Restrained RoM [deg] (cf. Fig. | ±77 |
| Static friction7 [Nm] | <∣±0.1∣ |
| Dynamic friction8 [Nm] | |
| Position control bandwidth [Hz] | 1.74 |
| PD steady-state error [deg] | <0.12 |
| Autonomy9 [min] | 125 |
| Battery capacity [Wh] | 11.1 |
1for a 1m83 tall user
2with palm support and fastening cable
3with module fingers fully extended
4in extension and in restrained RoM
5in flexion and in restrained RoM
6measurable by the load cell in both directions
7in restrained RoM
8for up to 250 deg/s, R2=0.995
9in normal use
Fig. 3Impedance planes obtained during human-eWrist interaction (repetitive extension and flexion movements) for two different sets of virtual inertia M and damping B. a Low mechanical resistance (i.e. high transparency) where M and B were set to 0.23 kg and 0.26 mNm/deg/s, respectively. b High mechanical resistance to movements where M and B were set in the admittance controller to 7.81 kg and 8.73 mNm/deg/s, respectively
Donning and doffing time
| 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy | 79.3 ±25.9 | 61.5 ±15.1 | 27.7 ±7.0 | 24.0 ±6.2 |
| S1 (FM: 44) | 54 | 54 | 22 | 22 |
| S2 (FM: 41) | 127 | 113 | 31 | 32 |
The average time, in seconds and per trial, the healthy participants required to don and doff the eWrist, and the individual time of the two stroke survivors S1 and S2.
Fig. 4Scores comparison derived from questionnaires for all participants (healthy and stroke). a Scores from the customized SUS questionnaire. The average score over all aspects is 83.1 ±8.2. b Scores from the RTLX questionnaire. The average workload score excluding Performance [108] is 22.3 ±9.5