Volitional Control of the Paretic Hand Post-Stroke Increases Finger Stiffness and Resistance to Robot-Assisted Movement.

Ava Chen, Katelyn Lee, Lauren Winterbottom, Jingxi Xu, Connor Lee, Grace Munger, Alexandra Deli-Ivanov, Dawn M Nilsen, Joel Stein, Matei Ciocarlie
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Abstract

Increased effort during use of the paretic arm and hand can provoke involuntary abnormal synergy patterns and amplify stiffness effects of muscle tone for individuals after stroke, which can add difficulty for user-controlled devices to assist hand movement during functional tasks. We study how volitional effort, exerted in an attempt to open or close the hand, affects resistance to robot-assisted movement at the finger level. We perform experiments with three chronic stroke survivors to measure changes in stiffness when the user is actively exerting effort to activate ipsilateral EMG-controlled robot-assisted hand movements, compared with when the fingers are passively stretched, as well as overall effects from sustained active engagement and use. Our results suggest that active engagement of the upper extremity increases muscle tone in the finger to a much greater degree than through passive-stretch or sustained exertion over time. Potential design implications of this work suggest that developers should anticipate higher levels of finger stiffness when relying on user-driven ipsilateral control methods for assistive or rehabilitative devices for stroke.

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中风后麻痹手的意志控制增加了手指的硬度和对机器人辅助运动的阻力。
在使用麻痹的手臂和手时,增加的努力会引起不自主的异常协同模式,并放大中风后个人肌肉张力的僵硬效应,这可能会增加用户控制的设备在功能性任务中辅助手部运动的难度。我们研究了在试图张开或握紧手时,意志上的努力是如何影响在手指水平上对机器人辅助运动的阻力的。我们对三名慢性中风幸存者进行了实验,以测量当使用者积极努力激活同侧肌电控制的机器人辅助手部运动时,与被动伸展手指时的僵硬变化,以及持续积极参与和使用的总体效果。我们的研究结果表明,随着时间的推移,上肢的主动接触比被动拉伸或持续用力能更大程度地增加手指的肌肉张力。这项工作的潜在设计意义表明,当依靠用户驱动的同侧控制方法来辅助或康复中风装置时,开发人员应该预期到更高水平的手指刚度。
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