The present application relates to mobility assistance devices, such as orthotic and prosthetic devices, and more particularly to an electronic control system and methods for a powered knee-ankle-foot orthosis.
Many health conditions result in significant impairment to mobility, which may be associated with varying degrees of mobility impairment. The large population of persons afflicted with such conditions include, for example, those affected by stroke, multiple sclerosis, ALS, Parkinson's disease, spinal cord injury, cerebral palsy, amputees, and many other conditions resulting from birth defects, disease, injury, or aging. To aid mobility, mobility assistance devices, such as leg orthotic devices and prosthetic devices, have been employed.
Traditionally, the field of orthoses has specialized in highly custom, form-fitting braces that are made to fit the unique anatomy and needs of each individual patient. The simplest form of such a device is a passive or non-powered orthotic device with a long-leg brace that extends over the knee and incorporates an ankle-foot orthosis to provide support at the ankle, which is coupled with the leg brace to lock the knee joint in full extension (referred to in the art as a “knee-ankle-foot-orthosis” or “KAFO”). In another configuration, the leg brace further may be connected to a hip component that provides added support at the torso (referred to in the art as a “hip-knee-ankle-foot-orthosis” or “HKAFO”). To decrease the high level of exertion associated with passive orthoses, the use of powered mobility assistance devices has been under development, which incorporate actuators and drive motors associated with a power supply to assist with locomotion. These powered mobility assistance devices have been shown to increase gait speed and decrease compensatory motions, relative to walking without powered assistance. The use of powered mobility assistance devices presents an opportunity for electronic control of the mobility assistance devices for enhanced user mobility.
Human gait generally includes two main phases: a stance phase and a swing phase. The stance phase occurs during the time the foot is in contact with the ground, and the swing phase occurs during the time the foot is off the ground and the lower leg is swinging such as during stepping. These phases can further be broken down into intermediate states that together form a complete gait cycle. During gait, forces are generated on the human foot that that can be sensed by appropriate sensors incorporated into a foot plate component of a powered KAFO (or HKAFO) device. In addition, appropriate sensors in other components of a powered orthosis, such as for example in an actuator component that drives a joint component, can be used to measure such parameters as angular positions of portions or components of a powered orthosis (e.g., a flexion or extension angle of a lower leg assembly relative to a knee joint component; user tilt angles), as well as velocity measurements (e.g., velocity of rotation of a lower leg assembly about a knee joint during a gait swing phase). Such measurements can provide a basis for control of a powered orthosis that provides suitable mobility assistance in a manner that mimics human gait motion to the extent of a user's physical capabilities, although such control is difficult to implement and there remains room for enhancement and optimization of electronic control for a powered orthosis.
In a particular example of control issues, KAFO devices typically are prescribed for individuals with knee instability, quadriceps weakness, knee hyperextension, and varus or valgus deformity. In conventional passive KAFO devices, the knee joint is locked, which provides weight-bearing knee stability, enabling ambulation while precluding knee buckling. However, locking the knee joint results in loss of foot clearance during the swing phase of gait, and thus the user tends to compensate for the locked knee joint by deviating from typical gait motion, such as by circumduction, vaulting, and hip hiking.
In one variation of a KAFO device, referred to in the art as a “stance control KAFO” (SC-KAFO), the knee joint only is mechanically locked during the stance phase of gait, with the knee joint mechanically releasing during the swing phase to allow a freer swing for a more normal gait motion. Many SC-KAFO devices are limited to mechanically operated (i.e., non-electronic) knee-angle-dependent locking versus unlocking, which may be unreliable on certain terrains and unsuitable for users with substantial knee stability impairment. Such devices also commonly require ankle dorsiflexion or a knee extension moment to implement unlocking, resulting in unreliable disengagement of the lock resulting in a significant stumble risk. Such devices also are unable to provide active swing flexion or extension assistance to aid walking, and therefore SC-KAFOs are difficult to use by individuals with severe quadriceps weakness or limited hip flexion. Since conventional SC-KAFOs are mechanical locking devices that do not actively control the position of the knee joint and require full knee joint extension to lock, such devices often fail to provide reliable support for stance phase weight bearing.
Effective control is therefore deficient in the various types of conventional KAFO devices.
The present application describes a highly adaptable and adjustable control system and methods for a powered mobility assistance device, such as for example a powered knee-ankle-foot orthosis (“KAFO), which provides reliable knee support during the stance phase of gait, predictable motion during the swing phase of gait, and a high level of cooperation with the user's physical capabilities versus need for mobility assistance. Embodiments of the present application provide reliable stance phase knee joint locking at any suitable knee angle, reliable knee joint unlocking, and active or powered assistance for knee flexion and extension during the swing phase of the gait cycle. A powered KAFO implements electronically controlled swing assist and stance control instead of the conventional passive and mechanical locking control as described above.
Sensors within the powered KAFO device, which may be incorporated into an actuator assembly of the KAFO device, measure knee joint angle and knee joint rotation angular velocity, and thigh tilt relative to vertical. In addition, sensors embedded into the foot plate component of the KAFO measure heel and toe ground reaction forces. The sensor measurements are combined to provide a real-time determination of the user's current position and motion within a gait cycle, resulting in a robust degree of control that ensures accurate and reliable knee joint locking, knee joint unlocking, and swing phase initiation and assistance. The powered KAFO maintains locked knee joint support so long as the ground reaction force measurements for heel and toe are above an amount set for a specific user, indicating the stance phase of gait. When a user intends to take a step, i.e. initiating the swing phase of gait from the stance phase, the heel force measurement drops as measured by the sensors, and the knee joint lock releases to permit the stance phase. The system then initiates swing phase after a small amount of user-generated thigh tilt motion that indicates stepping initiation. During the swing phase, the powered KAFO device drives the lower leg assembly of the KAFO to rotate the user's lower limb into knee flexion and then into knee extension to assist stepping.
The powered KAFO is operable in at least three operating modes: walk mode, lock mode, and free mode. In walk mode the powered KAFO provides stance knee support and swing assist through multiple gait cycles associated with walking. Minimal user input is required beyond natural weight shifts and slight hip flexion that result in the sensor measurements referenced above. No additional manual user inputs, such as button pressing or mode switching, is needed for or during standing, level-ground walking, inclines, declines, stairs ascent or descent, side-shuffling, or stepping backwards. In the lock mode the powered KAFO maintains the knee joint component in a locked state and does not release the knee joint component regardless of user weight shifts or hip flexion. In the free mode the powered KAFO maintains the knee joint component in an unlocked state with the actuator assembly maintained inactive. Modes may be manually changed, and mode transitions also may be made by the powered KAFO automatically based on user positional changes.
Mode transitions may include the transition from free mode to walk mode after a sit-to-stand motion of the user is sensed, and as a transition from walk to free mode after a stand-to-sit motion of the user is sensed. The user may also adjust the level of active assistance provided by the powered KAFO during the swing phase of the gait cycle, for example by adjusting the target peak knee flexion angle with manual controls such as “+” and “−” buttons on a physical keypad for increased versus decreased powered assistance respectively. The electronic control system interface may employ multi-color LEDs to indicate whether the device is on, the current mode, level of active assistance, and battery state of charge of the device. The control system further may distinguish between minor and major stumbles and react to complete a step or lock of the knee joint component, respectively, to attempt stumble recovery. The electronic control system further prevents undesirable movement by monitoring the orientation of the user and ensuring steps are only able to be triggered in accordance with proper user positioning and while the user is upright.
The control system and related methods of operating a mobility assistance device provide an enhanced method of operating to better approximate a human gait cycle for enhanced mobility assistance. The device control includes performing a gait cycle including stance control of a knee joint component of the powered mobility assistance device during a stance substate of the gait cycle, and swing control of the knee joint component during a swing substate of the gait cycle, wherein multiple gait cycles of the stance control and the swing control are implemented for walking using the powered mobility assistance device. The stance control includes: reading a desired stance knee angle of the knee joint component that is preset into a control system of the powered mobility assistance device; detecting an actual stance knee angle of the knee joint component as measured by sensors in the powered mobility assistance device; and measuring an error between the desired stance knee angle and the actual stance knee angle, and when the error between the desired stance knee angle and the actual stance knee angle exceeds a threshold error, operating an actuator assembly of the powered mobility assistance device to control the knee joint component to stabilize the knee joint component during the stance substate of the gait cycle. The swing control includes: reading a desired swing knee trajectory of the knee joint component that is preset into the control system of the powered mobility assistance device, wherein a swing knee trajectory is defined as a pattern of knee flexion and extension of the knee joint component through the swing substate of the gait cycle; detecting an actual swing knee trajectory of the knee joint component as measured by the sensors in the powered mobility assistance device; and measuring an error between the desired swing knee trajectory and the actual swing knee trajectory, and operating the actuator assembly of the powered mobility assistance device to control the knee joint component to adjust the actual swing knee trajectory toward the desired swing knee trajectory during the swing substate of the gait cycle. The control method may be implemented by an electronic control system of the mobility assistance device executing a control application embodied as program code stored on a non-transitory computer readable medium.
These and further features of the present invention will be apparent with reference to the following description and attached drawings. In the description and drawings, particular embodiments of the invention have been disclosed in detail as being indicative of some of the ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed, but it is understood that the invention is not limited correspondingly in scope. Rather, the invention includes all changes, modifications and equivalents coming within the spirit and terms of the claims appended hereto. Features that are described and/or illustrated with respect to one embodiment may be used in the same way or in a similar way in one or more other embodiments and/or in combination with or instead of the features of the other embodiments.
Embodiments of the present application will now be described with reference to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to refer to like elements throughout. It will be understood that the figures are not necessarily to scale.
The present application describes a highly adaptable and adjustable electronic control system and methods for a powered mobility assistance device, such as a powered orthosis configured as a knee-ankle-foot orthosis (KAFO), which provides reliable knee support during the stance phase of a gait cycle, predictable motion during the swing phase of the gait cycle, and a high level of cooperation with the user's physical capabilities versus need for mobility assistance. Embodiments of the present application provide reliable stance phase knee joint locking at any suitable knee angle, reliable knee joint unlocking, and active or powered assistance for knee flexion and extension during the swing phase of the gait cycle. A powered KAFO implements electronically controlled swing assist and stance control instead of the conventional passive and mechanical locking control as described above in the background section.
As a depicted example, the KAFO device 10 includes an actuator assembly having an actuator 12 that drives a knee joint component 14 via drive cables 16, whereby the knee joint component is rotatable to drive rotation of a lower leg assembly relative to an upper leg assembly of the KAFO. As further detail below, the actuator 12 includes a motor whose output is modified by a transmission system, wherein motion is imparted from the actuator 12 via the drive cables 16 to drive rotation of the knee joint component 14. The actuator 12 further may include a brake for damping the motor output, and various sensor and control electronics for implementing the enhanced KAFO control as described below. The actuator 12 is powered by a detachable battery pack 18, which may be removed for recharging and/or replacement by another comparable battery pack. The actuator 12 further may include a user interface 20, which may include manual control buttons and visual indicators that indicate the state or mode of the KAFO (for example using LEDs).
The KAFO 10 may include an upper leg assembly 22 and a lower leg assembly 24. The actuator 12 is mounted to the upper leg assembly 22 by any suitable mechanism. The upper leg assembly 22 may include a thigh shell 26, which may be made of a carbon fiber material and supports a user's upper leg just above the knee. The upper leg assembly further may include a thigh tongue 28 positioned forward relative to the thigh shell 26. The upper leg assembly 22 further may include an upper attachment device 30 to secure the KAFO 10 to the user's upper leg or thigh. For example, the upper attachment device 30 may include a series of adjustable straps that are secured using a hook-loop type fastening mechanism. The thigh tongue 28 may be made of a semi-flexible plastic material that distributes compression from the upper leg straps about the user's thigh when the KAFO is worn. Similarly, the lower leg assembly 24 may include a lower leg shell 32, which also may be made of a carbon fiber material and supports a user's lower leg just below the knee. The lower leg assembly 24 further may include a lower leg tongue 34 positioned forward relative to the lower leg shell 32. The lower leg assembly further may include a lower attachment device 36 to secure the KAFO 10 to the user's lower leg. For example, the lower attachment device 36 also may include a series of adjustable straps that are secured using a hook-loop type fastening mechanism. The lower leg tongue 34 also may be made of a semi-flexible plastic material that distributes compression from the lower leg straps about the user's lower leg when the KAFO is worn.
The lower leg assembly 24 is attached to the upper leg assembly 22 by a first attachment bar 38 and a second attachment bar 40. The first attachment bar 38 is fixed to the knee joint component 14 by any suitable means, such as using bolts or screws. Accordingly, the first attachment bar 38 will swing as the knee joint component 14 rotates. The second attachment bar 40 is fixed at a first end to the upper leg assembly and at a second to the lower leg assembly, also by any suitable means such as bolts or screws. The second attachment bar 40 has a hinge connection 42 that permits rotation of the second end relative the first end. With such connection of the upper leg assembly and the lower leg assembly via the two attachment bars, when the knee joint component 14 rotates the entire lower leg assembly 24 swings or rotates via the knee joint component 14 relative to the upper leg assembly 22.
The lower leg assembly further includes a lower bar 44 that extends down from the lower leg shell 32 to an ankle-foot component 46. The ankle-foot component 46 includes a foot plate 48, which may be made of a comparable material as the thigh and lower leg shells and provides a support structure for the user's foot and ankle. The ankle-foot component 46 further may include a sensor insole 50, which may be made of a compressible material such as a foam or gel encased in plastic. The sensor insole 50 may include foot sensors that can detect ground forces when a user's body weight is applied to the foot during use. For example, the foot sensors include a medial toe sensor 52, a lateral toe sensor 54, and a heel sensor 56. This three-sensor configuration has been determined to be suitable for implementing the control described in the current application, although other foot sensor configurations may be employed. The ankle-foot component 46 further may include a foot attachment device 58 to secure KAFO 10 to the user's foot and ankle during use, which also may include an adjustable strap that is secured using a hook-loop type fastening mechanism.
The KAFO control application 88 may be stored in a non-transitory computer readable medium, such as a random access memory (RAM), a read-only memory (ROM), an erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM or Flash memory), or any other suitable medium. In the example of
The electronic control system 64 further may be in electronic communication with both the sensory and drive components of the KAFO device. The connections may be hard wired connections through the KAFO structure and via the internal circuit board 63, and wireless communication also may be employed between the control system and/or sensor components when appropriate, particularly for example for communication with the foot sensors 52, 54, and 56 that are more remote from the actuator assembly. As referenced above, sensor information also is received by the electronic control system 64 from the sensors electronically integrated within the circuit board 63, such as for example the IMU 66 and the accelerometer 68. In
The electronic control system 64 further may be in electronic communication with the user interface 70, including the mode and command buttons 72 and 74, and the visual indicators 76 described above. The visual indicators may indicate aspects of device state and operation by lighting, such as by color-coded lighting in which light emitting diodes (LEDs) are employed as the visual indicators 76. Additional indicators may be employed, such as for example audio indicators by which speakers may be employed to provide audio alerts pertaining to aspects of device state and operation.
In general, the sensors within the actuator assembly measure knee joint angle and thigh tilt relative to vertical, as well as angular velocity of the knee joint component. In addition, the sensors embedded into the foot plate component of the KAFO measure heel and toe ground reaction forces. The sensor measurement signals together provide a real-time determination of the user's current position and motion within the gait cycle, resulting in a robust degree of control that ensures accurate and reliable knee joint locking, knee joint unlocking, and swing phase initiation and powered assistance. The powered KAFO 10 is operable in at least three operating modes that are designated as the walk mode, lock mode, and free mode. Transitions between these modes may be manually performed by the user, such as for example by pushing the mode button 72 of the user interface 70, and/or transitions between these modes may be performed automatically based on user positional changes as determined by the electronic control system 64 based on the sensor signal information.
In free mode, the control system operates to maintain the knee joint component in an unlocked state with the actuator being maintained inactive. Free mode permits the user to manually adjust the knee joint component without resistance or assistance by the powered actuator assembly. The knee joint component becomes completely passive during this mode, and due to the actuator assembly's high back-drivability, the position of the knee joint component can easily be adjusted by user motion. Accordingly, a user may walk without powered assistance similarly as with a passive KAFO device, which can help a user build strength and capability. If a manual lock is present on the KAFO as is common in conventional KAFO devices, entering free mode may be used to manually position the knee joint component so that the manual lock may be engaged to maintain the user's knee in a particular position.
In lock mode, the control system operates to maintain the knee joint component in a locked state and does not release the knee joint component regardless of how a user shifts weight or a degree of hip flexion. Lock mode creates very high resistance to motion of the knee joint component by engaging the brake to substantially resist knee joint component rotation. Regardless of user limb motion or tilt while in the lock mode, the control system does not disengage the brake. By engaging the brake to substantially resist knee joint component rotation, lock mode is well-suited to tasks in which stance support is desired for extended periods, but swing behavior is unnecessary, such as activities that may require substantial periods of standing. Lock mode also can provide a stable starting state in a stance position for transition from standing to walking in the walk mode.
In walk mode the control system operates to provide stance knee support and swing assist through multiple gait cycles associated with walking. Minimal user input is required beyond natural weight shifts and slight hip flexion that result in the sensor measurements described above. No additional manual user inputs, such as button pressing or mode switching, is needed for or during level-ground walking, inclines, declines, stairs ascent or descent, side-shuffling, or stepping backwards. In general, in walk mode the electronic control system operates to maintain locked knee joint component support so long as the ground reaction force measurements for heel and toe indicate the stance phase of a gait cycle. When a user positions to take a step, i.e. positions for initiating the swing phase of the gait cycle from the stance phase, the heel force measurement drops and the electronic control system operates to release the knee joint component for the locked state to permit proceeding to the swing stance phase. The control system then operates the knee joint component to initiate swing phase after a small amount of user-generated thigh tilt motion is detected to indicate step initiation. During the swing phase, the control system operates to drive the knee joint component such that the lower leg assembly of the KAFO rotates the user's lower limb into knee flexion and then into knee extension to provide powered assistance for walking.
Walk mode is subdivided into multiple substates as further detailed below. Transitions among these substates occur automatically as the user walks with the assistance of the KAFO device. The substates combine together to form a gait cycle through stance and swing portions of a gait cycle that may be repeated over multiple cycles for continuous walking. The walk mode thus corresponds to an enhanced method of operating a powered mobility assistance device to better approximate a human gait cycle for enhanced mobility assistance. In general, the walk mode includes performing a gait cycle including stance control of a knee joint component of the powered mobility assistance device during a stance substate of the gait cycle, and swing control of the knee joint component during a swing substate of the gait cycle, wherein multiple gait cycles of the stance control and the swing control are implemented for walking using the powered mobility assistance device.
The stance control includes: reading a desired stance knee angle of the knee joint component that is preset into a control system of the powered mobility assistance device; detecting an actual stance knee angle of the knee joint component as measured by sensors in the powered mobility assistance device; and measuring an error between the desired stance knee angle and the actual stance knee angle, and when the error between the desired stance knee angle and the actual stance knee angle exceeds a threshold error, operating an actuator assembly of the powered mobility assistance device to control the knee joint component to stabilize the knee joint component during the stance substate of the gait cycle. The swing control includes: reading a desired swing knee trajectory of the knee joint component that is preset into the control system of the powered mobility assistance device, wherein a swing knee trajectory is defined as a pattern of knee flexion and extension of the knee joint component through the swing substate of the gait cycle; detecting an actual swing knee trajectory of the knee joint component as measured by the sensors in the powered mobility assistance device; and measuring an error between the desired swing knee trajectory and the actual swing knee trajectory, and operating the actuator assembly of the powered mobility assistance device to control the knee joint component to adjust the actual swing knee trajectory toward the desired swing knee trajectory during the swing substate of the gait cycle. The control method may be implemented by the electronic control system of the mobility assistance device executing the control application embodied as program code stored on the non-transitory computer readable medium.
As referenced above, the first substate to be described is referred to as the stance substate. For illustrative purposes it is reasonable to describe the stance substate first in relation to the other substates of the walk mode. For safety and efficiency, transitions into walk mode from a previous free or lock mode typically place the KAFO device in the stance substate of the walk mode so that the user commences walking from the stable standing position corresponding to the stance portion of the gait cycle.
In the stance substate, the electronic control system provides a high resistive control element whereby the KAFO device brake is engaged to provide high resistance to flexion of the knee joint component (TR). The stance substate essentially corresponds to standing, and thus all the pressure sensors in the foot plate are highly or fully loaded. To maintain a stance position, high resistance to knee flexion stabilizes the knee joint component to maintain balance during standing. Because the KAFO brake is a friction brake (as opposed to a mechanical lock), however, it is possible for the knee joint component to slip under heavy load conditions. Accordingly, the electronic control system reads a desired stance knee position (8d) of the knee joint component, which is a parameter that is programmed or preset set into the control system as optimal for a particular user. The electronic control system also detects the actual stance knee position (8) of the knee joint component, as measured by the sensors of the KAFO device.
As shown in
As referenced above, when the threshold error (e) is sufficient to indicate non-negligible slipping, the control system operates the actuator to control the knee joint component to further stabilize the knee joint component during the stance substate of the gait cycle. For example, the electronic control system may provide additional resistance via powered actuation of the actuator assembly (TP). In
The next substate of the walk mode is referred to as the neutral substate, which is a transition from the stance substate to the swing substate. When a user begins to initiate stepping, the input received corresponding to the user limb motion measurement changes. In particular, the pressure sensors in the foot plate of the KAFO transition from being highly loaded toward being unloaded as the user's foot begins to raise from the ground. The neutral substate thus is a brief substate that corresponds to a transition out of the stance substate. In the neutral substate, in response to the transition toward unloading of the pressure sensors in the foot plate, the electronic control system renders inactive both the resistive control element and the powered control element, such as by disengaging the brake and providing zero torque from the actuator assembly (i.e., both the resistive control element TR and the powered control element TP in
There may be variations in the manner by which the electronic control system transitions into the neutral substate from the stance substate. One such variation is in the timing of the release of the knee joint component support for transition from the stance substate into the neutral substate. Depending upon the level of instability in a user's stance knee, the user may require that the electronic control system release stance support (i.e. enter the neutral substate) at different points during the stance substate. For users with moderate knee joint control, it is preferable that the electronic control system releases the stance knee support during the stance substate when it is detected from the pressure sensors that the center of pressure of a user's foot has advanced from the heel of the foot to the ball of the foot. This permits the user to break the knee in anticipation of toe-off and swing initiation. On the other hand, for users with little to no knee joint control, it is preferable that the electronic control system releases the stance knee support later to maintain stance support through the terminal or end of the stance substate, and release the knee support only when the user's weight is essentially fully off of the foot. This occurs when it is detected from the foot pressure sensors that the pressure sensors are fully (or nearly fully) unloaded. The electronic control system permits a programmed selection to be entered for operation of either stance support release occurring at heel off (i.e. when the user's weight is no longer detected on the heel, but may still be present on the toe) or toe off (i.e. when the user's weight is no longer detected on either the heel or the toe). In both cases, the heel and toe pressure sensors are loaded between steps to ensure that a full stance substate has occurred prior to entering a new neutral substate in preparation for entering a new swing substate.
Another such variation is an adjustment of a step trigger for transition from the neutral substate to the swing substate of the gate cycle associated with stepping. As referenced above, users with lower limb impairment will often have developed compensatory strategies to enable walking with a conventional passive KAFO. For example, users who walk with a locked-knee KAFO often circumduct their braced leg, while others “vault” by excessively plantarflexing the contralateral ankle or “hip hike”, all to elevate the braced-side foot and achieve foot clearance for stepping. Because the lower-limb movement pattern produced by these strategies vary widely, the electronic control system detects these various swing-initiation patterns so that the swing phase is initiated with a correct timing. With use of the powered KAFO device of the present application over time, such compensatory strategies should reduce and become eliminated as the user becomes accustomed to the more natural gait cycle of the powered KAFO device. A step trigger may be programmed into the electronic control system by an orthotist, and step trigger control further may be automatically adjusted by the electronic control system as the user capabilities improve versus the step trigger initially programmed by the orthotist.
A user begins the swing phase of a gait cycle by transitioning from the neutral substate into the next substate corresponding to the initiation of a step.
During the swing substate of the gait cycle, the knee joint component rotates through a swing knee trajectory that is defined as a pattern of knee flexion and extension through the swing substate of the gait cycle corresponding to a step. In general, as illustrated in
Referring to such control in connection with specific substates of the walk mode, following the brief neutral substate the next substate of the walk mode is the early swing substate, which corresponds to the first portion of the overall swing substate of a gait cycle that principally is characterized by knee flexion of the knee joint component. The electronic control system enters the early swing substate when it is detected from the user limb motion that the user's limb initiates a forward swing, as measured by one or more of the accelerometer, gyroscope, and/or other sensors in the inertial measurement unit (IMU). During the early swing substate, the electronic control system guides the knee joint component along a variable trajectory using position and velocity control through a first portion of a step characterized principally by knee flexion. A knee swing trajectory error particularly can occur due to a variation in the knee angle of the knee joint component at the initiation of the early swing substate, or in
Referring first to
Looking at the graph of
The next substate of the walk mode is the late swing substate, which again corresponds to the second portion of the overall swing substate of a gait cycle that principally is characterized by knee extension of the knee joint component. When the knee joint component begins extending, or when the early swing trajectory completes, the KAFO enters the late swing substate. The late swing substate proceeds similarly to the early swing substate. The KAFO should enter the late swing substate upon completion of the early swing trajectory, but because the late swing substate can also be initiated by knee extension, the peak knee angle at the end of early may not have been reached which can lead to a trajectory error during the late swing substate. To ensure smooth trajectory guidance, the electronic control system modifies the swing knee trajectory during the late swing substate in real time as needed to guide the knee joint component from a variable position at the initiation of the late swing substate to the user's desired stance knee position to return to the stance substate.
Accordingly, the electronic control system performs an error correction operation by which the control system detects that the late swing substate is to be entered prior to the knee joint component flexing to the desired peak knee angle θpeak.
Referring back to
At the completion of the late swing substate, i.e., upon completion of the swing substate trajectory of the gait cycle, the KAFO returns to the stance substate thereby completing a full gait cycle. The walk mode constitutes the electronic control system implementing multiple gait cycles as described above to perform walking. Through the walk mode substates, swing and stance knee joint component angles may be varied or adjusted as warranted for a given user. Lower limb impairment is often accompanied by a deviation from typical joint kinematics, such as for example a limited range of joint motion. The electronic control system is programmable and operable to adjust the trajectory guidance and control for each user. For example, a desired stance knee angle is adjustable to anywhere from 0° to 20° of flexion, permitting users to walk with a significant amount of flexion during the stance substate as warranted in view of the user's impairment. The desired swing knee trajectory may include a peak knee flexion angle achieved during the swing substate that is also adjustable, for example allowing the user to achieve a peak knee flexion angle from 30° to 100° of knee flexion. This permits the system to provide an adequate amount of foot clearance to a wide range of users with different types and degrees of impairment.
The electronic control system also may perform walking cadence control corresponding to the duration of the swing substate of each step, as indicated generally in
In another example, time spent in the stance substate is used to determine cadence in implementing the duration of the early and late swing substates. For example, a fixed duration of the swing substate (which again includes the combined early and late swing substates) may be set and programmed based on a specified ratio of the duration of the swing substate to a duration of the stance substate for a given user based on user capabilities. The specified ratio may be fixed based on representative stance phase duration measurements.
In another example, cadence control may be fully adaptive whereby duration of the swing substate adjusts in real time as the user walks. In this cadence control, a duration of the swing substate is set based on a specified and programmed ratio of the duration of the swing substate to a duration of the stance substate, and the duration of the swing substate adapts in real time based on a duration measurement of one or more previous stance substates. As the stance duration changes with continued walking, the swing substate duration adjusts in accordance with the ratio. Such adaptive cadence control may be performed independently of the trajectory control described above. Adaptive swing speed scales the amount of time it takes to complete the swing trajectory based on the duration of the stance substate of the previous several steps. This results in the swing speed increasing as the user walks more rapidly, thereby spending less time in the stance substate of each step as the user's gait improves. A challenge with adaptive swing duration control is that individual users have varying ratios of stance to swing time, depending upon the gait pattern. For example, one user walking at a cadence of 60 steps per minute may spend 500 ms in stance and 500 ms in swing, while another user also walking at the same cadence of 60 steps per minute may spend 700 ms in stance and only 300 ms in swing. The expected ratio between stance and swing can be set and programmed into the electronic control system and tuned for an individual user so that the user is comfortable walking with a variable cadence and having the electronic control system adapt the swing substate duration to the user's performance.
The stance and trajectory control of the walk mode permits additional control operations that aid in the safety and effectiveness of the KAFO device. An example of such a control operation is active stumble recovery. Because the electronic control system implements trajectory guidance and correction to control the swing phase of the gait cycle, foot scuffing or object collision can be responded to with active assistance via the powered control element controlling the actuator assembly to adjust torque levels, rather than by entering high-resistance states as conventional variable-damping systems do. In the event of foot scuffing or object collision, the electronic control system implements active torque from the actuator assembly to attempt to complete a step, ending with the brake engaged and the knee joint component in an extended position corresponding to standing, thereby implementing recovery from a stumble. In the event that step completion is not possible and a fall potential thereby increases, the electronic control system locks the knee joint component in the stance state to provide the user the ability to weight the limb to aid in recovery to prevent falling when possible.
Another example of such a control operation is to implement predictable fall behavior. The electronic control system is capable of detecting falls and responding to them in a predictable manner. The electronic control system accomplishes this control by first detecting the orientation of the KAFO while in the walk mode based on signals received from the accelerometer and IMU sensors. Should the KAFO device tilt or rotate out of an upright position by an angle greater than an amount indicative of falling, for example greater than 45 degrees, the electronic control system disables mode transitions which would initiate stepping or cause the knee joint component to release stance knee support. The rotation or tilt can be determined based on the angle of the thigh relative to the knee for a frontward or backward fall, or to the left or right relative to the ground for a sideways fall. This control ensures that the knee joint component maintains the performance when the falling tilt or rotation occurred. Transiently passing outside of the range of rotation only prevents transitions until the upright position is reattained. This means that a user performing a conventional adaptive stepping motion, such as for example a marching gait pattern or a high-kick step, will only temporarily and briefly be prohibited from state transitions. However, should the KAFO device maintain a deviation from the upright orientation for a sufficient period of time that indicates actual falling has occurred (e.g., five seconds is suitable), the electronic control system operates to lock the knee joint component. The purpose of such locking is to prevent the KAFO to undergo stepping after a fall has occurred, as the user would be on the ground. Accordingly, when the electronic control system determines that a fall has occurred, the electronic control system places the KAFO device in the lock mode described above to prevent any additional mode transitions until the user manually unlocks the device via the user interface.
Another example of such a control operation is to provide mobility assistance for transition from sitting to standing. Unlike conventional variable resistance KAFO devices, the electronic control system of the KAFO of the current application is capable of providing powered assistance to the knee joint component when transitioning from a sitting to a standing position. This sit-to-stand transition may be triggered by the user placing the KAFO device in the free mode, and with the knee joint component released in the free mode the user can orient the lower limb appropriately to load the foot sensors. Upon the detection of such loading, the electronic control system can operate the knee joint component to initiate standing by providing powered assistance with the actuator assembly to extend the knee.
As another example of such a control operation, different ways to implement mode transitions may be provided. As referenced above, the KAFO includes a user interface with physical buttons which enable deliberate mode transitions between the described walk, lock, and free modes. For advanced users, the KAFO device also can have a double-tap feature enabled or disabled by the user's orthotist to implement mode transitions, which is simpler to perform during use than manipulating the user interface buttons. The double-tap feature when present and enabled permits the user to make transitions between lock mode and walk mode by tapping on the KAFO two times with their fingers within a preset rate, which is detected by the KAFO sensors. For example, the KAFO accelerometer can detect this double-tap signal along the accelerometer axis and provide a double-tap sensor signal to the electronic control system. The electronic control system determines whether the measured taps are within a range of acceleration magnitude and within a certain time range of one another to constitute a mode transition command, whereas the electronic control system ignores other taps or impacts that are not commensurate with a mode transition command to avoid undesired transitions when the double-tap feature is enabled. The double-tap feature in particular may be employed to transition from lock mode to walk mode and vice versa.
As another example of such a control operation, the electronic control system may be configured to implement automatic foot sensor threshold adjustments. The electronic control system may be configured to provide the ability to adjust the sensitivity to pressure of the heel and toe pressure sensors. Some users may have, for example, higher baseline pressure levels due to a tighter fitting brace or lower pressure levels due to very low body mass. Foot sensor threshold pressure levels may be set by the user's orthotist as part of the KAFO device configuration. The electronic control system further may be configured to evaluate and automatically adjust foot sensor threshold pressure levels in response to changes seen in the user's pressure levels based on different circumstances. For example, a tight-fitting pair of shoes might elevate the baseline levels of the pressure readings. Elevated pressure levels could lead to difficulty with step initiation or inappropriate timing of step initiation. To avoid this situation, the electronic control system could automatically adjust the foot sensor threshold pressure levels based on the observed maximum and minimum foot sensor readings during each walking session. For example, the electronic control system may automatically update the thresholds based on the maximum and minimum foot sensor values recorded in the previous 100 steps taken.
As another example of such a control operation, the electronic control system may be configured to implement stairs and slope detection and control. The KAFO device generally is capable of ascending and descending ramps and slopes which meet ADA regulations for accessibility without modification to the KAFO's operation. Users optionally can also negotiate stairs by placing the device in the lock mode and using a step-to-gait pattern as the user would with a locked brace passive KAFO. The electronic control system also may be configured to automatically adjust the operation of the knee joint component in response to detection of a slope or stair ascent or descent based on the accelerometer and/or IMU sensor signals. The electronic control system can modify the knee flexion trajectory to better suit the steepness of the slope being navigated. Likewise, the electronic control system can provide powered knee extension assistance with the actuator assembly driving the knee joint component during stair ascent, and controlled resistance with the actuator assembly can be applied to the knee joint component during stair descent to permit a proper trajectory pattern in either ascent or descent. For typical KAFO users, stair ascent and descent are accomplished by having both feet land on the same step prior to proceeding to the next step. For users with higher mobility capabilities, same-step landing may not be warranted, and the electronic control system instead may implement stair control using a step-over-step ascent and/or descent instead of dual foot landing on same step before proceeding to the next step.
As another example of such a control operation, the electronic control system may be configured to implement enhanced instability detection. As referenced above, a typical foot sensor configuration includes three pressure sensors under the heel and balls of the foot. Because of the discrete nature of these sensors, data can be collected on the progression of the user's center of pressure as the KAFO moves from the heel at heel-strike to the balls of the foot prior to toe-off. The electronic control system can determine the progression of the center of pressure based on the foot sensor measurements, and significant deviations from an anticipated progression pattern (e.g., the center of pressure advancing to a significantly more lateral position on the balls of the foot) could be used as an indicator that the user is becoming unstable. The electronic control system may respond by controlling the knee joint component to prevent release of stance knee support during a detected period of instability.
As another example of such a control operation, the electronic control system may be configured to implement powered assistance via the knee joint component during the early swing substate, followed by late swing adaptation during the late swing substate. In other words, early swing adaptation, such as described above with respect to
As another example of such a control operation, the electronic control system may be configured to implement a “silent mode” that does not employ the brake. Of the various components of the actuator assembly, the brake tends to be the most noisy, and thus to enhance user comfort with the device for users with higher mobility capabilities, the brake may be used only when necessary to provide stance support. Instead, stance support may be implement using powered assistance by the motor of the actuator assembly, rather than by braking. As such stance support solely by powered assistance would require more user effort to achieve stable stance support, again, this mode is suitable for users with higher mobility capabilities. Another mode for users of higher mobility capabilities that would not employ the brake may be termed a “jogging mode” for faster and more continuous stepping. In such mode, the brake also would not be used during the stance substate for stance support. This allows a greater amount of knee flexion during the stance substate, which for rapid stepping becomes a shortened substate, to provide more dynamic motion during transitions from step to step when faster stepping is desired.
As another example of such a control operation, the electronic control system may be configured to implement turning or cornering control. As compared to ordinary straight-line stepping, turning or cornering may generate different signals from the sensors. For example, turning or cornering may generate different pressure signals from the lateral versus the medial toe sensors, and/or also may generate a different angular velocity signal from the gyroscope sensor in the IMU. Upon detecting sensor signals associated with turning or cornering, the electronic control system may control operation of the knee joint component to adjust such gait parameters as gait speed, stride length, joint rotation angle, and the like to account for turning or cornering.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain embodiment or embodiments, it is obvious that equivalent alterations and modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described elements (components, assemblies, devices, compositions, etc.), the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such elements are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any element which performs the specified function of the described element (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein illustrated exemplary embodiment or embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been described above with respect to only one or more of several illustrated embodiments, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other embodiments, as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2021/022287 | 3/15/2021 | WO |