Author_Institution :
Dept. Biomech. Eng., Delft Univ. of Technol., Delft, Netherlands
Abstract :
Due to neuromuscular disorders (e.g., Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy) people often loose muscle strength and become wheelchair bound. It is important to use muscles as much as possible. To allow this, and to increase independency of patients, an arm orthoses can be used to perform activities of daily life. The orthoses compensates for the gravity force of the arm, allowing people to perform movements with smaller muscle forces. For patients, the aesthetics of the orthosis is one of the critical issues. This paper presents the state-of-the-art in passive and wearable active arm orthoses, and investigates how to proceed towards a suitable structure for a wearable passive arm orthosis, that is able to balance the arm within its natural range of motion and is inconspicuous; in the ideal case it fits underneath the clothes. Existing devices were investigated with respect to the body interface, the volume, and the workspace. According to these evaluation metrics it is investigated to what extent the devices are wearable and inconspicuous. Furthermore, the balancing principle of the devices, the architecture, force transmission through the devices, and alignment with the body joints are investigated. It appears that there is only one wearable passive orthosis presented in literature. This orthosis can perform throughout the natural workspace of the arm, but is still too bulky to be inconspicuous. The other passive orthoses were conspicuous and mounted to the wheelchair. Except one, the wearable active orthoses were all conspicuous and heavy due to a large backpack to enclose the actuators. They also could not achieve the entire natural workspace of the human arm. A future design of an inconspicuous, wearable, passive arm orthoses should stay close to the body, be comfortable to wear, and supports pronation and supination.
Keywords :
actuators; assisted living; dexterous manipulators; gait analysis; handicapped aids; mechanoception; medical disorders; medical robotics; muscle; neurophysiology; orthotics; wheelchairs; actuators; aesthetics; arm balancing; assistive device; body interface; body joints; evaluation metrics; force transmission; gravity force; muscle force; muscle strength; neuromuscular disorder; passive arm orthoses; pronation; supination; wearable active arm orthoses; wearable passive arm orthoses; wheelchair bound; Actuators; Assistive devices; Force; Joints; Measurement; Muscles; Wheelchairs; arm support; assistive; balancing; inconspicuous; orthosis; upper extremity; wearable;