Development of the mechanical structure of an active monoarticular orthosis for lower limb

Author(s):  
Eduardo Caetano ◽  
Douglas Ruy S S Araujo ◽  
Lorenna Lucia Bastos Bandeira ◽  
Antônio Carlos Barbosa Zancanella
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (14) ◽  
pp. 2868 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice De Luca ◽  
Amy Bellitto ◽  
Sergio Mandraccia ◽  
Giorgia Marchesi ◽  
Laura Pellegrino ◽  
...  

Several exoskeletons have been developed and increasingly used in clinical settings for training and assisting locomotion. These devices allow people with severe motor deficits to regain mobility and sustain intense and repetitive gait training. However, three factors might affect normal muscle activations during walking: the assistive forces that are provided during walking, the crutches or walker that are always used in combination with the device, and the mechanical structure of the device itself. To investigate these effects, we evaluated eight healthy volunteers walking with the Ekso, which is a battery-powered, wearable exoskeleton. They walked supported by either crutches or a walker under five different assistance modalities: bilateral maximum assistance, no assistance, bilateral adaptive assistance, and unilateral adaptive assistance on each leg. Participants also walked overground without the exoskeleton. Surface electromyography was recorded bilaterally, and the statistical parametric mapping approach and muscle synergies analysis were used to investigate differences in muscular activity across different walking conditions. The lower limb muscle activations while walking with the Ekso were not influenced by the use of crutches or walker aids. Compared to normal walking without robotic assistance, the Ekso reduced the amplitude of activation for the distal lower limb muscles while changing the timing for the others. This depended mainly on the structure of the device, and not on the type or level of assistance. In fact, the presence of assistance did not change the timing of the muscle activations, but instead mainly had the effect of increasing the level of activation of the proximal lower limb muscles. Surprisingly, we found no significant changes in the adaptive control with respect to a maximal fixed assistance that did not account for subjects’ performance. These are important effects to take into careful considerations in clinics where these devices are used for gait rehabilitation in people with neurological diseases.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wangyang Ge ◽  
Ruoyu Jiang ◽  
Juan Zhao ◽  
Zhentao Liu ◽  
Zhaohui Yang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chenguang Li ◽  
Dimah Alahmadi ◽  
Mohammed Yousuf Abo Keir

Abstract In order to promote the development of sports training robots and improve the training of lower limbs in Sanda, a new mechanical structure of Sanda training robots is designed. The thesis combines the mathematical method of fractional differential equations to design a new type of omnidirectional moving platform mechanism, which realises the movement in any direction in the plane and can turn at any radius during the movement. From the perspective of kinematics, the mathematical relationship between wheel speed and robot trajectory is analysed, and a virtual prototype technology combined with Pro/E and Adams joint modelling and simulation method is used to establish an accurate and reliable virtual prototype model. The experimental simulation results show that the designed virtual prototype model is consistent with the mathematical model, which verifies the practical feasibility of the mechanical structure of the lower limb power generation robot for Sanda movement, and provides a reliable basis for the establishment of the physical prototype.


Author(s):  
Kenry W.C. Leung ◽  
Raymond K.Y. Tong ◽  
Xiaojun Wang ◽  
Ginny T.Y. Lee ◽  
Peter M.K. Pang ◽  
...  

In this study we designed a Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) trike for a female subject with spinal cord injury to exercise her lower limbs and improve her lower limb muscle condition for attending the 2016 Cybathlon FES bike competition. Our FES pilot was the only female participant, in the FES cycling competition and she rode for Team Phoenix from the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Due to the weakness of muscles in the lower limb of the subject, and due to scoliosis over her thoracolumbar aéra, the mechanical structure of the trike had to be tailor-made to ensure she sat on the bike in a safe and secure position. A six-phase angle-driven stimulation pattern was developed to stimulate quadriceps and hamstrings without gluteus muscles for contraction through four surface electrodes, thereby creating a cycling movement. To improve the cycling endurance and reduce the muscle fatigue, an on-off mode was developed for controlling the stimulation time that allowed the subject to cycle for 20s, then pause while the trike advanced without stimulation for 5s, followed by a subsequent 20 sec stimulation, to continue cycling. The pilot participated in the training procedure including training exercise at home, trike fitting in the trike by modifying the mechanical structure, and conducting the cycling exercise for six months. We observed significant improvements in the pilot’s lower limb condition. The on-off mode enabled our pilot to extend her cycling endurance effectively, from 1 min to 2.5 mins and the distance from 62m to 100m. Over the eight minutes time limit, our team successfully finished 100 m in the Cybathlon FES.


2014 ◽  
Vol 716-717 ◽  
pp. 1461-1464
Author(s):  
Xiao Hua Shi ◽  
Yun Shan Lu ◽  
Hao Lu ◽  
Hong Bo Wang

The rehabilitation robot which consists of two mechanical legs and an automatic seat was produced according to ergonomics. Each mechanical leg has three DOF. It can train patients combined with sEMG signal and FES. The rehabilitation robot has three train modes: passive mode, assistant mode and impedance mode, and it suits patients with different rehabilitation phases.


JAMA ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 197 (11) ◽  
pp. 915-916
Author(s):  
I. J. Schatz
Keyword(s):  

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