736 research outputs found

    Design and Evaluation of the LOPES Exoskeleton Robot for Interactive Gait Rehabilitation

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    This paper introduces a newly developed gait rehabilitation device. The device, called LOPES, combines a freely translatable and 2-D-actuated pelvis segment with a leg exoskeleton containing three actuated rotational joints: two at the hip and one at the knee. The joints are impedance controlled to allow bidirectional mechanical interaction between the robot and the training subject. Evaluation measurements show that the device allows both a "pa- tient-in-charge" and "robot-in-charge" mode, in which the robot is controlled either to follow or to guide a patient, respectively. Electromyography (EMG) measurements (one subject) on eight important leg muscles, show that free walking in the device strongly resembles free treadmill walking; an indication that the device can offer task-specific gait training. The possibilities and limitations to using the device as gait measurement tool are also shown at the moment position measurements are not accurate enough for inverse-dynamical gait analysis

    A review on design of upper limb exoskeletons

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    A Novel Design and Implementation of a 4-DOF Upper Limb Exoskeleton for Stroke Rehabilitation with Active Assistive Control Strategy

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    We developed a robot, CUREs (Chulalongkorn University Rehabilitation Robotic Exoskeleton system), for upper extremity rehabilitation. The active assistive control strategy based on the impedance force control is developed and implemented to obtain assistive-resistive paths tracking for rehabilitation activities. The desired trajectory or rehabilitated training pattern for each specific patient need to be assigned first by a medical doctor and a physical therapy. The therapist can program the desired trajectory by guiding the patient arm based on the assigned path pattern and the set of via points will be stored and used for generating the desired trajectory. The desired trajectory will be stored specific for the patient and can be called back anytime. During the rehabilitation, the robot can assist and resist the patient’s arm to follow the desired trajectory. If the patient has difficulty moving his arm to track the desired path, the robot will help by adding more torque to help the patient to move his arm to reduce the error between the desired path and the actual posture. And if the patient himself can move his arm tracking the desired path, the robot will not apply any more force to assist or resist. The necessary state variables such as angular position and torque can be recorded during the training. The main purpose of the experiment, follow the medical ethic, is to assure that there is no side effect for using this rehabilitation robot. Five subacute stroke patients participated in this pilot study. All patients have severe upper extremity weakness. The medical doctor will assign the training pattern based on patient condition. The result showed that the Fugl-Meyer Assessment Upper Extremity Scale was improved after 10 days of training in all participants without any sign of side effect.We developed a robot, CUREs (Chulalongkorn University Rehabilitation Robotic Exoskeleton system), for upper extremity rehabilitation. The active assistive control strategy based on the impedance force control is developed and implemented to obtain assistive-resistive paths tracking for rehabilitation activities. The desired trajectory or rehabilitated training pattern for each specific patient need to be assigned first by a medical doctor and a physical therapy. The therapist can program the desired trajectory by guiding the patient arm based on the assigned path pattern and the set of via points will be stored and used for generating the desired trajectory. The desired trajectory will be stored specific for the patient and can be called back anytime. During the rehabilitation, the robot can assist and resist the patient’s arm to follow the desired trajectory. If the patient has difficulty moving his arm to track the desired path, the robot will help by adding more torque to help the patient to move his arm to reduce the error between the desired path and the actual posture. And if the patient himself can move his arm tracking the desired path, the robot will not apply any more force to assist or resist. The necessary state variables such as angular position and torque can be recorded during the training. The main purpose of the experiment, follow the medical ethic, is to assure that there is no side effect for using this rehabilitation robot. Five subacute stroke patients participated in this pilot study. All patients have severe upper extremity weakness. The medical doctor will assign the training pattern based on patient condition. The result showed that the Fugl-Meyer Assessment Upper Extremity Scale was improved after 10 days of training in all participants without any sign of side effect

    Computational Geometry in Medical Applications

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    Tongue Control of Upper-Limb Exoskeletons For Individuals With Tetraplegia

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