DocumentCode
2696484
Title
Development of a robot which can simulate swallowing of food boluses with various properties for the study of rehabilitation of swallowing disorders
Author
Noh, Yohan ; Segawa, Masanao ; Sato, Kei ; Wang, Chunbao ; Ishii, Hiroyuki ; Solis, Jorge ; Takanishi, Atsuo ; Katsumata, Akitoshi ; Iida, Yukihiro
Author_Institution
Grad. Sch. of Adv. Sci. & Eng., Waseda Univ., Tokyo, Japan
fYear
2011
fDate
9-13 May 2011
Firstpage
4676
Lastpage
4681
Abstract
Many patients suffer from swallowing disorders (dysphagia). There are many treatments for these disorders, such as swallowing therapy, surgery, and dietary modification. In our study, we focuse on dietary modification, a common approach. Normally, the swallowing is affected by food bolus properties such as hardness, stickiness and rheological characteristics, and dietary modifications can prevent swallowing disorder patients from suffering dysphagia (aspiration), as well as promote good nutrition. Based on these facts, our goal is to find foods which do not cause dysphagia, and develop food for swallowing disorder patients accordingly. Therefore, we are proposing an in-vitro Dynamic VFSS (Video Fluorographic Swallowing Study) simulation system which uses advanced robotics technology to mimic the dynamic process of swallowing and monitors the status and movement of the food bolus inside the system, for objective evaluation of the swallowing process. The dynamic VFSS simulation system consists of a head, mandible, neck, tongue, pharynx, and larynx which reproduce human anatomy. It is driven by 16 actuators with wire driving mechanisms. In this paper, we will present the dynamic VFSS simulation unit in detail. In addition, we will detail a set of the experiments carried out to determine whether food bolus properties can affect dysphagia or not. To observe the movement of the food bolus, we use a Video Fluoroscopy (VF) unit. The results of the experiments show that thickened boluses have a tendency to leave residue in the epiglottic vallecula. In contrast, liquids cause less residue, and increase the risk of dysphagia (aspiration). Moreover, this study shows that the frontal image, as well as the lateral image, is important for evaluating residual food in the oral- pharyngeal space.
Keywords
medical robotics; patient rehabilitation; radiography; video signal processing; dietary modification; dynamic VFSS simulation system; food bolus properties; patient rehabilitation; robot; robotics technology; swallowing disorders; video fluorographic swallowing study; video fluoroscopy unit; wire driving mechanisms; Barium; Bones; Dynamics; Humans; Solid modeling; Tongue; Wires;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Shanghai
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
978-1-61284-386-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICRA.2011.5980134
Filename
5980134
Link To Document