Many persons with neurological injuries require a wheelchair for mobility assistance. When such persons have severely weakened arms and hands, they often cannot move the wheelchairs by themselves. Therapeutic exercise following a neurological injury can not only improve arm and hand function but can further help prevent secondary complications such as contractures. If a person could regain enough arm movement, he or she may then be able to operate a wheelchair without, or with less, assistance.
There are various ways in which such therapeutic exercise can be performed. One option is active assistance exercise facilitated by a trained therapist. Active assistance requires that the patient actively contribute to the movement, an aspect of training that is important for motor learning and plasticity. Active assistance also enables patients with a high level of impairment to participate meaningfully in therapy by limiting frustration, increasing motivation, and promoting self-efficacy. Active assistance may also enhance sensory input that drives motor plasticity and can demonstrate correct movement patterns that enable better learning. While such active assistance provides many benefits, one-on-one sessions with a trained therapist are expensive and therefore out of reach to many individuals.
Because of the expense involved with using a therapist, there has been a surge in the development of devices that partially automate rehabilitation exercise. For example, robotic therapy devices have been designed to provide “assistance-as-needed” to arm movement, mimicking the clinical technique of active assisted exercise. While such robots enable a variety of forms of active assistance, they are also relatively expensive and often complex, making them impractical for widespread use. In addition, the viability of using devices that can actively apply large forces to limbs in minimally supervised environments, such as at home, is still unclear.
Persons with arm weakness can exercise their arms on their own without using a therapist or a robotic therapy device. However, if their arms are severely impaired, such exercise is difficult and compliance with autonomous exercise programs is low.
In view of the above discussion, it can be appreciated that it would be desirable to have a simple and inexpensive apparatus and method that enable an individual to exercise his or her arm for therapeutic purposes.
The present disclosure may be better understood with reference to the following figures. Matching reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the figures, which are not necessarily drawn to scale.
As described above, it would be desirable to have a simple and inexpensive apparatus and method that enable an individual to exercise his or her arm for therapeutic purposes. Disclosed herein are examples of such apparatuses and methods. In one embodiment, an exercise apparatus comprises a lever that attaches to a wheel of a wheelchair that a user can push and pull against a force provided by one or more resilient members. In some embodiments, the force is provided by one or more elastic bands that attach to the lever and the wheelchair. In further embodiments, the apparatus includes a forearm support that is adapted to support the user's arm during exercise.
In the following disclosure, various specific embodiments are described. It is to be understood that those embodiments are example implementations of the disclosed inventions and that alternative embodiments are possible. All such embodiments are intended to fall within the scope of this disclosure.
As described above, robotic arm therapy devices that incorporate actuated assistance can enhance arm recovery, motivate patients to practice, and allow therapists to deliver semi-autonomous training. However, because such devices are relatively expensive and complex, they have not achieved widespread use in rehabilitation clinics or at home. Disclosed herein are simple, mechanically-passive devices that provide robot-like assistance for active arm training using the principle of mechanical resonance.
The disclosed devices are based on two concepts. The first concept is to use resonance to assist movement. This concept was inspired in part by a previous study that found substantially improved, long-term recovery of arm movement ability when stroke patients rocked themselves in a rocking chair with their impaired arm, which was placed in an air splint, during subacute rehabilitation. Computer algorithms have previously been developed for robotic devices to provide assistance for rhythmic movements. However, a passive resonant system accomplishes this goal as well. Such a system oscillates with a larger amplitude when it is pushed at its resonant frequency because it stores and releases energy in a manner synergistic to the ongoing movement. A passive resonant system will not move unless pushed, fulfilling the requirement that the exercise be “patient active.” Thus, resonance provides a way for weakened patients to amplify their movements, while still maintaining a causal relationship between amount of effort and size of the resulting movement.
The second concept is to integrate the resonant system with an existing, ubiquitous piece of rehabilitation equipment, i.e., a manual wheelchair. Many people with arm impairment after stroke or spinal cord injury use wheelchairs, and it is common for people with a neurological injury to spend substantial time in a manual wheelchair during rehabilitation. In addition, several low-cost wheelchairs have already been developed for use in resource-poor conditions. A strategy was to reversibly convert a manual wheelchair into a therapeutic technology for the severely weak arm, essentially dual-purposing the wheelchair so that it can be used as an exercise device and then quickly converted back to a mobility aid. This strategy has the advantages of convenience, accessibility, portability, lower net cost, and reduced need to transfer the patient to another device for exercise. Use of a manual wheelchair also provides a low-friction, high-mass base (because of the combined weight of the user and chair), which is ideal for achieving a system with a resonant frequency within a physiologic range.
A resonating wheelchair was developed that enables a wheelchair user to push and pull on a lever against a force provided by a resilient member to make the wheelchair roll back and forth relative to a neutral point. If the user pumps the lever at the resonant frequency of the system formed by the combination of the apparatus, the wheelchair, and the user, then the user's arm's active range of motion increases relative to that possible with a single push. Movements with increased range of motion better stretch soft tissue, which may help preserve the suppleness of the soft tissue and reduce spasticity and may also provide somatosensory stimulation that aids use-dependent plasticity. Furthermore, helping people with severe impairment create movements with an increased range of motion may provide a greater sense of self-efficacy, which may be important to motivate people with a severe motor impairment to exercise.
Further mounted to the frame 20 of the wheelchair 12 are rear wheels 26 and front wheels 28. The rear wheels 26 are relatively large and include push rims 30 that can be used by the wheelchair user to drive the wheelchair forward, rearward, left, or right. As is apparent from
As shown in
In the illustrated embodiment, the tube 34 attaches to the push rim 30 at two points, including a point near the bottom of the rim and a point near the top of the rim. As shown in
With reference back to
The elastic band 40 is also connected to the lever 32. As shown in
With reference to
With continued reference to
Once the user is strapped to the apparatus 10, the user can push his or her arm forward from a neutral position shown in
The exercise provided by the apparatus 10 assists the user in obtaining a larger range of motion (moving further away from the neutral position) if he or she rocks back and forth at the resonant frequency of the system. To appreciate the theoretical basis of the design, approximate the distributed system of mass, damping, and stiffness as a lumped-parameter, mass-spring-damper system, and assume a person can generate a maximum pushing force on the lever 32 equal to Fmax. Next assume that the total stiffness of the elastic band 40 and the user's arm, acting in the direction of rocking motion of the lever 32, is K. In such a case, the maximum distance the hand moves when the person pushes with maximum force is:
Now, if the system is resonant (i.e., the damping ratio ζ<0.707) and the person pushes with a force F=Fmax sin(ωt), where w is the resonant frequency of the system, then the distance the hand moves will be:
where the “movement amplification gain” A is given by:
This means that if the person periodically pushes with strength Fmax at just the right time, then the amplitude of the hand movement will grow to be A times larger than is possible with just a single maximum push. Note that A depends on the damping ratio ζ, which is given by the stiffness K (set by the elastic band and biomechanical stiffness of the arm), damping C (set by the friction in the system and the biomechanical damping of the arm), and mass M (i.e., total inertia of the chair and lever and the person, including their body mass and the inertia of their arm) of the system according to:
Note that the average amplitude of the rocking is proportional to the average force applied to the lever 32. If the user stops pushing, the wheelchair 12 stops rocking. Therefore, the apparatus 10 requires active effort by the user and the user is rewarded with a larger range of motion if he or she tries harder and maintains the correct movement timing. Note also that it is important for the resonant frequency of the system to be within physiologic range for human movement (˜1 Hz) while still providing appropriate range of motion of the arm. The resonant frequency is given by:
The resonant frequency of the system is in physiologic range because the mass to be moved is large, as it includes the user's own mass combined with the mass of the wheelchair 12 as the wheelchair rolls.
Two pilot experiments were performed on an exercise apparatus similar to that described above. The first experiment was designed to test the hypothesis that the resonance provided by the exercise apparatus would amplify the active AROM of a user's arm. In this experiment, the step response of the apparatus was first measured with six volunteers who were victims of a chronic, severe stroke. To do this, the volunteers were asked to hold the lever but to relax the arm, and the experimenter pulled the lever forward approximately 40 degrees, extending the arm, and then released the apparatus two times. A tilt sensor (Nintendo®'s Wii Remote) attached to the lever measured the angle change of the device at 20 Hz and measured the damping ratio of the apparatus using a logarithmic decrement method. The sensor was placed 10 cm from the end of the lever on the bottom side. The resonant frequency of rocking, ωres, was predicted for each volunteer from the damped natural frequency of the step response, ωd, using the equation:
The predicted step response of the apparatus (i.e., based on second-order, linear, mass-spring-damper model using the measured damping ratio and the measured damped natural frequency for each participant) was compared to the actual step responses that were measured.
To measure the unamplified range of motion, the six volunteers were asked to push and hold the lever as far forward as possible with their impaired arm three times, and then to pull and hold the lever as far backward as possible three times. The volunteers were monitored to ensure that they did not lean with their trunk to extend their AROM in the forward direction. To measure the effect of the mechanical resonance, the volunteers were asked to rock the lever at whatever frequency felt natural, and they were again monitored to prevent leaning. The goal was to determine if the volunteers would naturally rock at the resonant frequency and if the AROM achieved during rocking was greater than that achieved during the isolated, maximum effort push and pull, as predicted by the theory outlined above. Subjects performed informed consent according to the approved procedures of the U.C. Irvine Institutional Review Board.
A separate pilot study was also conducted of the exercise apparatus with different subjects to provide an initial assessment of the apparatus' value as a rehabilitation device. The question at issue was, “If individuals with a severe chronic stroke, who have finished formal rehabilitation and have reached a plateau of arm ability, exercise with the apparatus, will they improve their arm movement ability without experiencing an increase in arm pain?” For this study, eight stroke victim volunteers were recruited from the outpatient population of the Instituto Nacional de Neurología y Neurocirugía in Mexico City, and the volunteers provided informed consent according to the procedures approved by the INNN Institutional Review Board. Inclusion criteria were greater than six months post injury, moderate to severe arm movement impairment defined as an upper extremity Fugl-Meyer (FM) score less than 35 out of 66, and willingness to refrain from additional rehabilitation for the upper extremities during the six-week duration of the study. The average age of the participants was 52±15 years old.
The participants were assigned to two groups based on their availability. Participants in the Exercise-Rest group (n=3) exercised with the device for three consecutive weeks, and then rested for three consecutive weeks. Participants in the Rest-Exercise group (n=5) reversed the order of exercise and rest. Arm mobility typically reaches a plateau in chronic stroke victims by many measures, provided individuals maintain a relatively steady level of activity. The data from the Rest-Exercise group was used to confirm the well-known plateau for this study. The existence of the plateau enabled the use of the participant's baseline assessments as the control.
During the exercise period, the participants rocked the lever for a total of six hours in eight 45-minute sessions spread over the three weeks. They were continuously monitored by an investigator to ensure that they did not perform compensatory trunk movements or experience discomfort. The stiffness of the elastic band was increased after four sessions for every participant by stretching the band to a more extended operating point. Because the band stiffness increased with length, this increased the stiffness of the band. This was done to compensate for the fact that the band used in this study tended to mechanically wear out at the connection points to the chair.
The primary outcome measure was an automated measure of AROM of the arm obtained using the apparatus. AROM of the arm was quantified using an improved tilt sensor (ADXL 213) attached to the lever in the same manner described above. The participants were asked to rock 50 times, and the angle of the lever relative to the initial position at 50 Hz was recorded using a microcontroller (PIC 18F2455). The AROM was defined as the average amplitude of the angle change during rocking. The participants repeated this test three times per session to establish an average for that day. A baseline AROM measurement was obtained for each participant on a separate day before the participants began the exercise period. Then the AROM measurement was performed immediately before each of the eight exercise sessions. This provided a baseline measurement of AROM for each participant before they began therapy and eight measurements after therapy began. Secondary measures were the upper extremity FM score and subjective report of arm pain. The same non-blinded therapist evaluated the FM score at the start and end of both the three-week rest period and the exercise period and at a three-month follow-up evaluation. Each participant indicated his or her arm pain level before and after each session on a visual analog pain scale from 0 to 10, with 0 being no pain and 10 being the greatest pain possible.
When normality was confirmed, changes in the outcome measures were analyzed using parametric statistics including the t-test. If normality was violated, non-parametric statistics were used.
In a first experiment, whether or not the mechanical resonance property of the exercise apparatus would amplify arm AROM of participants with stroke (n=6) was tested. First, to verify that the system acts like an underdamped, linear second order system, the step response of the system was measured. The step response was well approximated by a second order linear model with a mean RMSE over 12 trials of 1.9±0.6 degrees (
In a second pilot study with a different set of eight volunteers who were chronic stroke victims, the effect of repeated use of the apparatus on arm movement ability and arm pain for individuals who had ceased formal rehabilitation was measured. The mean initial FM score for the eight participants in the pilot study was 17±8 out of 66 points; i.e., the participants had substantial arm impairment. There was not a significant difference between the initial FM scores for each group (Wilcoxon rank sum test, p=0.29). The FM score of the Rest-Exercise group did not increase during the rest period (
Average AROM of the arm improved steadily across the three weeks of exercise (
The mean change in FM score after three weeks of exercise with the exercise apparatus, averaged across all participants (n=8), was 8.5±4.1 points, while the mean change after the three-week rest period for all participants was 1.5±4. This difference was significant (t-test, p=0.009), with the assumption of normality confirmed for both change distributions (Lilliefors test, p=0.67 and 0.89, respectively). It was hypothesized that the small average improvement in FM score across all subjects during the rest period arose because the group that exercised with the apparatus first continued to improve during the subsequent rest period. Indeed, the FM score of the Exercise-Rest group (n=3) increased by 4.3±4.1 points during the rest period (
Participant rating of arm pain increased slightly by a non-significant amount (p=0.11) at the end of each exercise session relative to the beginning but returned to approximately its starting value by the next session (
Whether the changes in AROM correlated with the changes in FM score was analyzed. This analysis was performed for the same six participants included in the AROM analysis above (i.e., those six who could not push the wheelchair to its full range of motion). One of the data sets did not show significant change in AROM, but it was still included for completeness (
Using the mean frequency from the AROM data of 0.87 Hz and an exercise period of about 40 minutes, it was estimated that the participants performed about 4,000 movements per session (2,000 flexions and 2,000 extensions). This assumes that the participants rocked continuously in each session, with no breaks for the entire 45-minute session, which was verified by the investigator who continuously monitored each session. This adds up to roughly 32,000 practice movements with a specific, intentional timing performed by each participant over the eight exercise sessions.
Various modifications and/or additions can be made to the exercise apparatus described herein. For example, the apparatus can include one or more sensors that can be used to measure the distances that the lever is moved by the user as well as the number of repetitions the user has performed. In addition, although the disclosure has been focused on the example of exercising the arm, the exercise apparatus can be modified to exercise other limbs of the body. For example, the apparatus could be modified to exercise one or more of the hip, knee, or ankle.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/654,371, filed Jun. 1, 2012, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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61654371 | Jun 2012 | US |