Proietti Tommaso, Nuckols Kristin, Grupper Jesse, Schwerz de Lucena Diogo, Inirio Bianca, Porazinski Kelley, Wagner Diana, Cole Tazzy, Glover Christina, Mendelowitz Sarah, Herman Maxwell, Breen Joan, Lin David, Walsh Conor
John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Whittier Rehabilitation Hospital, Bradford, MA, USA.
Wearable Technol. 2024 Jan 26;5:e1. doi: 10.1017/wtc.2023.26. eCollection 2024.
Telerehabilitation and robotics, either traditional rigid or soft, have been extensively studied and used to improve hand functionality after a stroke. However, a limited number of devices combined these two technologies to such a level of maturity that was possible to use them at the patients' home, unsupervised. Here we present a novel investigation that demonstrates the feasibility of a system that integrates a soft inflatable robotic glove, a cloud-connected software interface, and a telerehabilitation therapy. Ten chronic moderate-to-severe stroke survivors independently used the system at their home for 4 weeks, following a software-led therapy and being in touch with occupational therapists. Data from the therapy, including automatic assessments by the robot, were available to the occupational therapists in real-time, thanks to the cloud-connected capability of the system. The participants used the system intensively (about five times more movements per session than the standard care) for a total of more than 8 hr of therapy on average. We were able to observe improvements in standard clinical metrics (FMA +3.9 ± 4.0, < .05, COPM-P + 2.5 ± 1.3, < .05, COPM-S + 2.6 ± 1.9, < .05, MAL-AOU +6.6 ± 6.5, < .05) and range of motion (+88%) at the end of the intervention. Despite being small, these improvements sustained at follow-up, 2 weeks after the end of the therapy. These promising results pave the way toward further investigation for the deployment of combined soft robotic/telerehabilitive systems at-home for autonomous usage for stroke rehabilitation.
远程康复和机器人技术,无论是传统的刚性还是软性的,都已经得到了广泛的研究,并被用于改善中风后的手部功能。然而,将这两种技术结合到能够在患者家中无人监督使用的成熟水平的设备数量有限。在此,我们展示了一项新的研究,该研究证明了一个集成了软性充气机器人手套、云连接软件界面和远程康复治疗的系统的可行性。十名慢性中度至重度中风幸存者在家中独立使用该系统4周,遵循软件引导的治疗方案,并与职业治疗师保持联系。由于该系统的云连接功能,治疗数据,包括机器人的自动评估,职业治疗师可以实时获取。参与者密集使用该系统(每次治疗的动作比标准护理多约五倍),平均总共接受了超过8小时的治疗。在干预结束时,我们能够观察到标准临床指标(FMA增加3.9±4.0,<.05;COPM-P增加2.5±1.3,<.05;COPM-S增加2.6±1.9,<.05;MAL-AOU增加6.6±6.5,<.05)和关节活动范围(增加88%)的改善。尽管样本量较小,但这些改善在治疗结束后2周的随访中得以维持。这些有前景的结果为进一步研究在家中部署组合式软性机器人/远程康复系统以实现中风康复的自主使用铺平了道路。