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Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System

Robotic gait training may improve overground ambulation for individuals with poor control over pelvic motion. However, there is a need for an overground gait training robotic device that allows full control of pelvic movement and synchronizes applied forces to the user’s gait. This work evaluates an...

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Autores principales: Stramel, Danielle M., Prado, Antonio, Roy, Serge H., Kim, Heakyung, Agrawal, Sunil K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10079635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36264728
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3213207
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author Stramel, Danielle M.
Prado, Antonio
Roy, Serge H.
Kim, Heakyung
Agrawal, Sunil K.
author_facet Stramel, Danielle M.
Prado, Antonio
Roy, Serge H.
Kim, Heakyung
Agrawal, Sunil K.
author_sort Stramel, Danielle M.
collection PubMed
description Robotic gait training may improve overground ambulation for individuals with poor control over pelvic motion. However, there is a need for an overground gait training robotic device that allows full control of pelvic movement and synchronizes applied forces to the user’s gait. This work evaluates an overground robotic gait trainer that applies synchronized forces on the user’s pelvis, the mobile Tethered Pelvic Assist Device. To illustrate one possible control scheme, we apply assistive frontal plane pelvic moments synchronized with the user’s continuous gait in real-time. Ten healthy adults walked with the robotic device, with and without frontal plane moments. The frontal plane moments corresponded to 10% of the user’s body weight with a moment arm of half their pelvic width. The frontal plane moments significantly increased the range of frontal plane pelvic angles from 2.6° to 9.9° and the sagittal and transverse planes from 4.6° to 10.1° and 3.0° to 8.3°, respectively. The frontal plane moments also significantly increased the activation of the left gluteus medius muscle, which assists in regulating pelvic obliquity. The right gluteus medius muscle activation did not significantly differ when frontal plane moments were applied. This work highlights the ability of the mobile Tethered Pelvic Assist Device to apply a continuous pelvic moment that is synchronized with the user’s gait cycle. This capability could change how overgroundrobotic gait training strategiesare designed and applied. The potential for gait training interventions that target gait deficits or muscle weakness can now be explored with the mobile Tethered Pelvic Assist Device.
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spelling pubmed-100796352023-04-07 Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System Stramel, Danielle M. Prado, Antonio Roy, Serge H. Kim, Heakyung Agrawal, Sunil K. IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng Article Robotic gait training may improve overground ambulation for individuals with poor control over pelvic motion. However, there is a need for an overground gait training robotic device that allows full control of pelvic movement and synchronizes applied forces to the user’s gait. This work evaluates an overground robotic gait trainer that applies synchronized forces on the user’s pelvis, the mobile Tethered Pelvic Assist Device. To illustrate one possible control scheme, we apply assistive frontal plane pelvic moments synchronized with the user’s continuous gait in real-time. Ten healthy adults walked with the robotic device, with and without frontal plane moments. The frontal plane moments corresponded to 10% of the user’s body weight with a moment arm of half their pelvic width. The frontal plane moments significantly increased the range of frontal plane pelvic angles from 2.6° to 9.9° and the sagittal and transverse planes from 4.6° to 10.1° and 3.0° to 8.3°, respectively. The frontal plane moments also significantly increased the activation of the left gluteus medius muscle, which assists in regulating pelvic obliquity. The right gluteus medius muscle activation did not significantly differ when frontal plane moments were applied. This work highlights the ability of the mobile Tethered Pelvic Assist Device to apply a continuous pelvic moment that is synchronized with the user’s gait cycle. This capability could change how overgroundrobotic gait training strategiesare designed and applied. The potential for gait training interventions that target gait deficits or muscle weakness can now be explored with the mobile Tethered Pelvic Assist Device. 2023 2023-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10079635/ /pubmed/36264728 http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3213207 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. For more information, see https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Article
Stramel, Danielle M.
Prado, Antonio
Roy, Serge H.
Kim, Heakyung
Agrawal, Sunil K.
Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System
title Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System
title_full Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System
title_fullStr Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System
title_short Effects of Timed Frontal Plane Pelvic Moments During Overground Walking With a Mobile TPAD System
title_sort effects of timed frontal plane pelvic moments during overground walking with a mobile tpad system
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10079635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36264728
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3213207
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