Title :
Restoration of blink in facial paralysis patients using FES
Author :
McDonnall, Daniel ; Guillory, K. Shane ; Gossman, M. Douglas
Author_Institution :
Ripple LLC, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
fDate :
April 29 2009-May 2 2009
Abstract :
Six subjects with profound facial paralysis were tested to determine the feasibility of restoring functional blink via electrical stimulation of the orbicularis oculi muscle (OOM) without also evoking painful sensations. Stimulation of the paretic eyelid was triggered by EMG detection of blink in contralateral healthy OOM to deliver charge during inhibition of the levator palpebrae antagonist. Transcutaneous and percutaneous stimulation electrode placements were tested during multiple stimulation trials in subjects. Stimulation was delivered via two constant voltage computer controlled channels. Sensory activation thresholds were approximately an order of magnitude lower for percutaneous stimulation (0.4 V) vs. transcutaneous stimulation (3 V). Exploration of multiple possible stimulation paradigms yielded a means by which sufficient muscle activation could be recruited to evoke complete eyelid closure without producing prohibitively painful sensation. Stimulation efficacy across subjects correlated with degree of patient neuromuscular recovery following initial paresis.
Keywords :
biomedical electrodes; electromyography; eye; mechanoception; medical disorders; medical signal detection; neuromuscular stimulation; EMG detection; FES; evoked complete eyelid closure; facial paralysis patients; functional blink restoration; functional neuromuscular stimulation; levator palpebrae antagonist inhibition; multiple stimulation trials; muscle activation; orbicularis oculi muscle; painful sensation; paretic eyelid stimulation; patient neuromuscular recovery; percutaneous stimulation electrode placement; sensory activation thresholds; transcutaneous stimulation; transcutaneous stimulation electrode placement; voltage 0.4 V; voltage 3 V; voltage computer controlled channels; Animals; Cities and towns; Electrical stimulation; Electrodes; Electromyography; Eyelids; Facial muscles; Neural engineering; Recruitment; Testing; FES; blink prosthesis; facial paralysis;
Conference_Titel :
Neural Engineering, 2009. NER '09. 4th International IEEE/EMBS Conference on
Conference_Location :
Antalya
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2072-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2073-5
DOI :
10.1109/NER.2009.5109238