Posen Joshua N, Lee Joshua, Hammond Frank L, Housley Stephen N, Butler Andrew J, Shinohara Minoru
George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA.
ASML, Wilton, CT, USA.
medRxiv. 2025 May 8:2025.05.02.25326083. doi: 10.1101/2025.05.02.25326083.
This study aimed to develop a novel rehabilitative approach for post-stroke hand movement using a simple detached robotic hand and synergistic torso muscle activities for reaching and to perform a pilot test on its functionality and feasibility. In reference to a mental practice that does not activate hand muscles, enhanced cognitive engagement would be achieved without hand activation using the externally present, visible, and audible robotic hand by activating the non-hand muscles associated with hand function. A simple and low-cost robotic hand was developed and placed distal to the hidden resting hand as if it were a functional extended hand. The opening and closing motions of the detached robotic hand were controlled by electromyogram of the anterior and posterior torso muscles associated with reaching and retrieving while providing visual and auditory feedback. The functionality of the developed system was confirmed on the repeatability of the range of duration, excursion, and response time with low variability within an acceptable range. An able-bodied adult and five mildly impaired stroke survivors embodied the detached robotic hand by successfully controlling it with or without concurrent testing of their biological finger. In the concurrent finger tests, increased reactive force and hand muscle activity were observed in most participants. These observations confirmed that the developed approach that controls a detached robotic hand with reaching-associated torso muscles is functional and applicable to stroke survivors with and without involving the biological human hand. The robotic hand system detached from the user and controlled by the voluntary effort of their reaching-associated torso muscles has enabled future studies to examine the efficacy of synergistic muscle-robot interaction as a potential rehabilitation tool.
本研究旨在开发一种新颖的中风后手运动康复方法,使用简单的可拆卸机器人手和协同的躯干肌肉活动来进行够物动作,并对其功能和可行性进行初步测试。参照不激活手部肌肉的心理练习,通过激活与手部功能相关的非手部肌肉,利用外部可见、可听的机器人手,在不激活手部的情况下实现增强的认知参与。开发了一种简单且低成本的机器人手,并将其放置在隐藏的静止手的远端,就好像它是一个功能性的延伸手。可拆卸机器人手的开合动作由与够物和取回相关的前后躯干肌肉的肌电图控制,同时提供视觉和听觉反馈。所开发系统的功能通过持续时间范围、偏移量和响应时间的可重复性得到证实,其变异性较低且在可接受范围内。一名健全的成年人和五名轻度受损的中风幸存者通过成功控制可拆卸机器人手体现了该方法,无论是否同时测试他们的生物手指。在同时进行手指测试时,大多数参与者观察到反应力和手部肌肉活动增加。这些观察结果证实,用与够物相关的躯干肌肉控制可拆卸机器人手的开发方法是可行的,适用于涉及或不涉及生物人手的中风幸存者。与用户分离并由与够物相关的躯干肌肉的自主努力控制的机器人手系统,使未来的研究能够检验协同肌肉 - 机器人相互作用作为一种潜在康复工具的功效。