Morel Pierre, Ferrea Enrico, Taghizadeh-Sarshouri Bahareh, Audí Josep Marcel Cardona, Ruff Roman, Hoffmann Klaus-Peter, Lewis Sören, Russold Michael, Dietl Hans, Abu-Saleh Lait, Schroeder Dietmar, Krautschneider Wolfgang, Meiners Thomas, Gail Alexander
Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory-Sensorimotor Group, German Primate Center-Leibniz Institute for Primate Research, Kellnerweg, 4, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany.
J Neural Eng. 2016 Feb;13(1):016002. doi: 10.1088/1741-2560/13/1/016002. Epub 2015 Dec 8.
The ease of use and number of degrees of freedom of current myoelectric hand prostheses is limited by the information content and reliability of the surface electromyography (sEMG) signals used to control them. For example, cross-talk limits the capacity to pick up signals from small or deep muscles, such as the forearm muscles for distal arm amputations, or sites of targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR) for proximal amputations. Here we test if signals recorded from the fully implanted, induction-powered wireless Myoplant system allow long-term decoding of continuous as well as discrete movement parameters with better reliability than equivalent sEMG recordings. The Myoplant system uses a centralized implant to transmit broadband EMG activity from four distributed bipolar epimysial electrodes.
Two Rhesus macaques received implants in their backs, while electrodes were placed in their upper arm. One of the monkeys was trained to do a cursor task via a haptic robot, allowing us to control the forces exerted by the animal during arm movements. The second animal was trained to perform a center-out reaching task on a touchscreen. We compared the implanted system with concurrent sEMG recordings by evaluating our ability to decode time-varying force in one animal and discrete reach directions in the other from multiple features extracted from the raw EMG signals.
In both cases, data from the implant allowed a decoder trained with data from a single day to maintain an accurate decoding performance during the following months, which was not the case for concurrent surface EMG recordings conducted simultaneously over the same muscles.
These results show that a fully implantable, centralized wireless EMG system is particularly suited for long-term stable decoding of dynamic movements in demanding applications such as advanced forelimb prosthetics in a wide range of configurations (distal amputations, TMR).
当前肌电假手的易用性和自由度受到用于控制它们的表面肌电图(sEMG)信号的信息含量和可靠性的限制。例如,串扰限制了从小块或深部肌肉采集信号的能力,如用于上臂远端截肢的前臂肌肉,或用于近端截肢的靶向肌肉再支配(TMR)部位。在此,我们测试从完全植入、感应供电的无线Myoplant系统记录的信号是否能比等效的sEMG记录更可靠地长期解码连续以及离散的运动参数。Myoplant系统使用一个中央植入物来传输来自四个分布式双极肌外膜电极的宽带肌电活动。
两只恒河猴在其背部接受植入,同时将电极置于它们的上臂。其中一只猴子经过训练,通过一个触觉机器人执行光标任务,使我们能够在手臂运动期间控制动物施加的力。第二只动物经过训练,在触摸屏上执行中心外伸展任务。我们通过评估从原始肌电信号中提取的多个特征来解码一只动物随时间变化的力以及另一只动物离散伸展方向的能力,将植入系统与同步的sEMG记录进行比较。
在这两种情况下,来自植入物的数据使一个用单日数据训练的解码器在接下来的几个月里保持准确的解码性能,而在相同肌肉上同时进行的同步表面肌电图记录则并非如此。
这些结果表明,一个完全可植入的、中央无线肌电系统特别适合在要求苛刻的应用中对动态运动进行长期稳定解码,如各种配置(远端截肢、TMR)的先进前肢假肢。