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Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session

Exoskeleton gait rehabilitation is an emerging area of research, with potential applications in the elderly and in people with central nervous system lesions, e.g., stroke, traumatic brain/spinal cord injury. However, adaptability of such technologies to the user is still an unmet goal. Despite impo...

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Autores principales: Di Marco, Roberto, Rubega, Maria, Lennon, Olive, Formaggio, Emanuela, Sutaj, Ngadhnjim, Dazzi, Giacomo, Venturin, Chiara, Bonini, Ilenia, Ortner, Rupert, Cerrel Bazo, Humberto Antonio, Tonin, Luca, Tortora, Stefano, Masiero, Stefano, Del Felice, Alessandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8293335/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34287357
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mps4030048
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author Di Marco, Roberto
Rubega, Maria
Lennon, Olive
Formaggio, Emanuela
Sutaj, Ngadhnjim
Dazzi, Giacomo
Venturin, Chiara
Bonini, Ilenia
Ortner, Rupert
Cerrel Bazo, Humberto Antonio
Tonin, Luca
Tortora, Stefano
Masiero, Stefano
Del Felice, Alessandra
author_facet Di Marco, Roberto
Rubega, Maria
Lennon, Olive
Formaggio, Emanuela
Sutaj, Ngadhnjim
Dazzi, Giacomo
Venturin, Chiara
Bonini, Ilenia
Ortner, Rupert
Cerrel Bazo, Humberto Antonio
Tonin, Luca
Tortora, Stefano
Masiero, Stefano
Del Felice, Alessandra
author_sort Di Marco, Roberto
collection PubMed
description Exoskeleton gait rehabilitation is an emerging area of research, with potential applications in the elderly and in people with central nervous system lesions, e.g., stroke, traumatic brain/spinal cord injury. However, adaptability of such technologies to the user is still an unmet goal. Despite important technological advances, these robotic systems still lack the fine tuning necessary to adapt to the physiological modification of the user and are not yet capable of a proper human-machine interaction. Interfaces based on physiological signals, e.g., recorded by electroencephalography (EEG) and/or electromyography (EMG), could contribute to solving this technological challenge. This protocol aims to: (1) quantify neuro-muscular plasticity induced by a single training session with a robotic exoskeleton on post-stroke people and on a group of age and sex-matched controls; (2) test the feasibility of predicting lower limb motor trajectory from physiological signals for future use as control signal for the robot. An active exoskeleton that can be set in full mode (i.e., the robot fully replaces and drives the user motion), adaptive mode (i.e., assistance to the user can be tuned according to his/her needs), and free mode (i.e., the robot completely follows the user movements) will be used. Participants will undergo a preparation session, i.e., EMG sensors and EEG cap placement and inertial sensors attachment to measure, respectively, muscular and cortical activity, and motion. They will then be asked to walk in a 15 m corridor: (i) self-paced without the exoskeleton (pre-training session); (ii) wearing the exoskeleton and walking with the three modes of use; (iii) self-paced without the exoskeleton (post-training session). From this dataset, we will: (1) quantitatively estimate short-term neuroplasticity of brain connectivity in chronic stroke survivors after a single session of gait training; (2) compare muscle activation patterns during exoskeleton-gait between stroke survivors and age and sex-matched controls; and (3) perform a feasibility analysis on the use of physiological signals to decode gait intentions.
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spelling pubmed-82933352021-07-22 Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session Di Marco, Roberto Rubega, Maria Lennon, Olive Formaggio, Emanuela Sutaj, Ngadhnjim Dazzi, Giacomo Venturin, Chiara Bonini, Ilenia Ortner, Rupert Cerrel Bazo, Humberto Antonio Tonin, Luca Tortora, Stefano Masiero, Stefano Del Felice, Alessandra Methods Protoc Study Protocol Exoskeleton gait rehabilitation is an emerging area of research, with potential applications in the elderly and in people with central nervous system lesions, e.g., stroke, traumatic brain/spinal cord injury. However, adaptability of such technologies to the user is still an unmet goal. Despite important technological advances, these robotic systems still lack the fine tuning necessary to adapt to the physiological modification of the user and are not yet capable of a proper human-machine interaction. Interfaces based on physiological signals, e.g., recorded by electroencephalography (EEG) and/or electromyography (EMG), could contribute to solving this technological challenge. This protocol aims to: (1) quantify neuro-muscular plasticity induced by a single training session with a robotic exoskeleton on post-stroke people and on a group of age and sex-matched controls; (2) test the feasibility of predicting lower limb motor trajectory from physiological signals for future use as control signal for the robot. An active exoskeleton that can be set in full mode (i.e., the robot fully replaces and drives the user motion), adaptive mode (i.e., assistance to the user can be tuned according to his/her needs), and free mode (i.e., the robot completely follows the user movements) will be used. Participants will undergo a preparation session, i.e., EMG sensors and EEG cap placement and inertial sensors attachment to measure, respectively, muscular and cortical activity, and motion. They will then be asked to walk in a 15 m corridor: (i) self-paced without the exoskeleton (pre-training session); (ii) wearing the exoskeleton and walking with the three modes of use; (iii) self-paced without the exoskeleton (post-training session). From this dataset, we will: (1) quantitatively estimate short-term neuroplasticity of brain connectivity in chronic stroke survivors after a single session of gait training; (2) compare muscle activation patterns during exoskeleton-gait between stroke survivors and age and sex-matched controls; and (3) perform a feasibility analysis on the use of physiological signals to decode gait intentions. MDPI 2021-07-13 /pmc/articles/PMC8293335/ /pubmed/34287357 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mps4030048 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Di Marco, Roberto
Rubega, Maria
Lennon, Olive
Formaggio, Emanuela
Sutaj, Ngadhnjim
Dazzi, Giacomo
Venturin, Chiara
Bonini, Ilenia
Ortner, Rupert
Cerrel Bazo, Humberto Antonio
Tonin, Luca
Tortora, Stefano
Masiero, Stefano
Del Felice, Alessandra
Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session
title Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session
title_full Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session
title_fullStr Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session
title_short Experimental Protocol to Assess Neuromuscular Plasticity Induced by an Exoskeleton Training Session
title_sort experimental protocol to assess neuromuscular plasticity induced by an exoskeleton training session
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8293335/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34287357
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mps4030048
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