Title :
A System for Delivering Mechanical Stimulation and Robot-Assisted Therapy to the Rat Whisker Pad During Facial Nerve Regeneration
Author :
Heaton, James T. ; Knox, Christopher J. ; Malo, Juan S. ; Kobler, James B. ; Hadlock, Tessa A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Surg., Massachusetts Gen. Hosp., Boston, MA, USA
Abstract :
Functional recovery is typically poor after facial nerve transection and surgical repair. In rats, whisking amplitude remains greatly diminished after facial nerve regeneration, but can recover more completely if the whiskers are periodically mechanically stimulated during recovery. Here we present a robotic “whisk assist” system for mechanically driving whisker movement after facial nerve injury. Movement patterns were either preprogrammed to reflect natural amplitudes and frequencies, or movements of the contralateral (healthy) side of the face were detected and used to control real-time mirror-like motion on the denervated side. In a pilot study, 20 rats were divided into nine groups and administered one of eight different whisk assist driving patterns (or control) for 5-20 minutes, five days per week, across eight weeks of recovery after unilateral facial nerve cut and suture repair. All rats tolerated the mechanical stimulation well. Seven of the eight treatment groups recovered average whisking amplitudes that exceeded controls, although small group sizes precluded statistical confirmation of group differences. The potential to substantially improve facial nerve recovery through mechanical stimulation has important clinical implications, and we have developed a system to control the pattern and dose of stimulation in the rat facial nerve model.
Keywords :
medical robotics; motion control; neurophysiology; surgery; tissue engineering; denervated side; facial nerve recovery; facial nerve regeneration; facial nerve transection; functional recovery; mechanical stimulation delivery systems; mechanically driving whisker movement; movement patterns; natural amplitudes; natural frequencies; rat whisker pad; real-time mirror-like motion control; robot-assisted therapy; robotic whisk assist system; surgical repair; suture repair; time 5 min to 8 week; unilateral facial nerve cut; whisk assist driving patterns; whisking amplitude; Maintenance engineering; Rats; Robots; Surgery; Testing; Tracking; Facial nerve; facial paralysis; nerve regeneration; rehabilitation; reinnervation; robotic; vibrissae; whisking; Animals; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Facial Nerve Injuries; Female; Motion Therapy, Continuous Passive; Nerve Regeneration; Physical Stimulation; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Robotics; Therapy, Computer-Assisted; Treatment Outcome; Vibrissae;
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNSRE.2013.2244911