Mannella Kailynn, Albanese Giulia A, Massone Valentina, Power Kevin E, Button Duane C, Farthing Jonathan P, Beaudette Shawn M, Ditor Dave S, Tokuno Craig D, Zenzeri Jacopo, Holmes Michael W R
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
Shirley Ryan AbilityLab, Chicago, IL, USA.
J Neuroeng Rehabil. 2025 Jul 5;22(1):152. doi: 10.1186/s12984-025-01684-y.
The goal of this work was to develop an adaptive rehabilitation technique using a haptic wrist robot that would induce cross-education to an untrained limb. Fourteen individuals with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and eight non-affected adults completed an eight-week intervention. MS participants were placed into two groups, training their more affected limb (direct training), and training their less affected limb (indirect training). The purpose of the intervention was to improve wrist and grip strength (measured via maximal grip and isometric wrist strength) and motor control (measured via robotic assessments). Participants trained with the robotic device three times per week for eight consecutive weeks. Training consisted of eccentric contractions as the participant resisted a force elicited from the robotic device as it moved in flexion, extension, and radial-ulnar deviation. The MS group reported significant increases in wrist strength. The indirect training group significantly improved in flexion, extension, radial and ulnar deviation in the trained limb, and flexion and radial deviation in the untrained limb. The direct training group showed improvements in extension and ulnar deviation in both limbs. The control group improved in radial and ulnar deviation, with radial deviation improving in the untrained limb. Grip force remained unchanged for all groups. MS participants significantly decreased tracking and figural error post-intervention suggesting evidence that motor control adaptations occurred following an adaptive and resistive robotic intervention of the upper limb. Results of this work provide evidence that eight-week robotic rehabilitation can elicit cross-education effects to the untrained limb.
这项工作的目标是开发一种使用触觉手腕机器人的适应性康复技术,该技术将对未受过训练的肢体引发交叉训练效应。14名多发性硬化症(MS)患者和8名未受影响的成年人完成了为期八周的干预。MS参与者被分为两组,一组训练其受影响较大的肢体(直接训练),另一组训练其受影响较小的肢体(间接训练)。干预的目的是提高手腕和握力(通过最大握力和等长手腕力量测量)以及运动控制能力(通过机器人评估测量)。参与者连续八周每周使用机器人设备训练三次。训练包括离心收缩,即参与者在机器人设备进行屈伸和桡尺偏斜运动时抵抗其产生的力。MS组报告手腕力量显著增加。间接训练组训练肢体的屈伸、桡偏和尺偏以及未训练肢体的屈伸和桡偏均有显著改善。直接训练组的两个肢体在伸展和尺偏方面均有改善。对照组在桡偏和尺偏方面有所改善,未训练肢体的桡偏有所改善。所有组的握力均保持不变。MS参与者在干预后追踪和图形误差显著降低,这表明上肢进行适应性和抵抗性机器人干预后发生了运动控制适应。这项工作的结果提供了证据,表明为期八周的机器人康复可以对未训练的肢体引发交叉训练效应。