Title :
A pneumatic robot for re-training arm movement after stroke: rationale and mechanical design
Author :
Sanchez, R.J., Jr. ; Wolbrecht, E. ; Smith, R. ; Liu, J. ; Rao, S. ; Cramer, S. ; Rahman, T. ; Bobrow, J.E. ; Reinkensmeyer, D.J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. & Aerosp. Eng., California Univ., Irvine, CA, USA
fDate :
28 June-1 July 2005
Abstract :
This paper describes the development of a pneumatic robot for functional movement training of the arm and hand after stroke. The device is based on the Wilmington Robotic Exoskeleton (WREX), a passive, mobile arm support developed for children with arm weakness caused by a debilitative condition. Previously, we scaled WREX for use by adults, instrumented it with potentiometers, and incorporated a simple grip strength sensor. The resulting passive device (Training WREX or "T-WREX") allows individuals with severe motor impairment to practice functional movements (reaching, eating, and washing) in a simple virtual reality environment called Java Therapy 2.0. However, the device is limited since it can only apply a fixed pattern of assistive forces to the arm. In addition, its gravity balance function does not restore full range of motion. Therefore, we are also developing a robotic version of WREX named Pneu-WREX, which can apply a wide range of forces to the arm during naturalistic movements. Pneu-WREX uses pneumatic actuators, non-linear force control, and passive counter-balancing to allow application of a wide range of forces during naturalistic upper extremity movements. Besides a detailed description of the mechanical design and kinematics of Pneu-WREX, we present results from a survey of 29 therapists on the use of such a robotic device.
Keywords :
design; force control; medical robotics; nonlinear control systems; patient rehabilitation; pneumatic actuators; pneumatic systems; robot kinematics; Wilmington robotic exoskeleton; arm movement retraining; kinematics; mechanical design; naturalistic upper extremity movements; nonlinear force control; passive counter-balancing; passive mobile arm support; pneu-WREX; pneumatic actuators; pneumatic robot; stroke; Exoskeletons; Gravity; Instruments; Java; Medical treatment; Mobile robots; Pneumatic actuators; Potentiometers; Robot sensing systems; Virtual reality;
Conference_Titel :
Rehabilitation Robotics, 2005. ICORR 2005. 9th International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9003-2
DOI :
10.1109/ICORR.2005.1501151