The invention relates to a device for adjusting the speed of a treadmill, which is used for the therapy of paraplegic or hemiplegic patients and other neurological as well as orthopaedical patient groups as well as for the (fitness) training of healthy or elderly subjects.
Treadmills are known by prior art for example from EP 0 002 188. The speed of the treadmill varies according to the heart frequency of the patient. If the heart frequency reaches an upper limit, the speed of the treadmill decreases. The heart frequency is a parameter that is not applicable in the therapy of paraplegic patients, since the purpose of the therapy is the ability of a proper motion sequence and the heart frequency does not change in a manner that is usable for this purpose.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,707,319 discloses a treadmill with two lever to pull in order to adjust the belt speed. For patients this is not usable because the patient has to concentrate on the motion sequence.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,179,754 discloses a treadmill equipped with detectors in order to detect the position of the feet of the runner. According to the measured position, the running belt will be accelerated or decelerated. This device cannot be used, when the runner does not move relatively to the treadmill, e.g. when a patient is fixed to the surrounding for therapeutical reasons so that his horizontal position relatively to the treadmill does not change.
Another attempt in order to control the velocity of the treadmill is to detect the load of the motor, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,416,444. The disturbance variables such as frictional influences are rather big. Due to this inaccuracy it is difficult to use this device for therapeutical purposes with variable treadmill speed.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method and a device, which gives a person the possibility for automatic treadmill training with variable treadmill speed.
According to the invention there is provided a method to control the velocity of a treadmill according to the walking velocity of the person that is using the treadmill. The person's trunk is connected to the environment via a rigid mechanical frame (or an elastic band). A reaction force is measured within this frame (or band), which occurs when the person intends and tries to increase or decrease his walking velocity. A signal represents said reaction force. The signal is transmitted to a control unit, which is used to control the velocity of the treadmill.
This will provide realistic conditions for a person who relearns walking with such a method.
In order to control the velocity of the treadmill the component of the reaction force, which is parallel to the surface of the treadmill and in running direction of the running belt of the treadmill has to be determined.
The person is harnessed with a hip and possibly-with a leg orthotic device. The reaction force is measured from force sensors that can be positioned in various positions.
The drawings will be explained in greater detail by means of a description of an exemplary embodiment, with reference to the following figures:
The device comprises at least a treadmill 2, measure means 3,. a controller 5 and fixation means 10. The treadmill may be a treadmill as known from prior art i.e. WO 0028927 and comprises at least a running belt 80 a an adjustable motor. The surface of the treadmill comprises an essential horizontal base plane 6, on which the patient is walking. For definition reasons: the running direction of the running belt 80 is designated as longitudinal direction and the direction that lies orthogonal to the horizontal base plane 6 is designated as vertical direction. The direction orthogonal to these two directions will be called transversal or lateral direction.
A person 1 may be a patient who needs a therapy in order to relearn walking, walks on a treadmill and is rigidly connected to his surroundings especially by a pelvis or trunk harness. The treadmill is powered by an adjustable motor and initially runs with a treadmill velocity v. The velocity v can be adjusted continuously starting at 0 m/s.
The patient 1 is connected by fixation means 10 to mechanical rods 15, 16. Fixation means may be a harness that the patient 1 is wearing on his upper part of the body. The two mechanical rods 15, 16 are connected to a first end of a further rod 20. The second end of the rod 20 is connected to a bearing point 30 being in fixed relationship to the bearing of the treadmill. Since the bearing point 30 allows pivoting movements only, the movement of the patient 1 is restricted to vertical movements. Lateral (transversal) and longitudinal movements are not possible. Thus, the patient's position remains on the running belt 80 of the treadmill and especially at the same place. This makes it possible to provide a lesser length of the treadmill, e.g. only having a length being in the range of the step length of a person with a great body height.
Rod 20 can be a rigid bar or an elastic rubber band or rubber bar. In case of an elastic connection the patient's position can vary also in ateral (=transversal) and longitudinal directions. However, elastic forces are acting in such way that the patient remains on the treadmill.
When the patient 1 wants to accelerate or decelerate his body in order to change the walking-velocity v, he will produce a longitudinal force in backward or forward direction, respectively. Due to the rigid mechanical connection of the patient to the surrounding, this force results in a mechanical reaction force acting onto the mechanical rods 15, 16, 20. Force measure means 3 are arranged on the mechanical rods, in order to measure the reaction force. A force measure mean 3 may be a force sensor, for example based on a strain gauge measurement principle. The measured reaction force is processed in a controller 5 in order to adjust the velocity of the treadmill v to the intended walking-velocity of the patient 1. If the velocity adjustment is optimal, the patient will have the feeling that he is changing the treadmill speed with his own voluntary efforts. This method is also designated as force-based adjustment of the treadmill velocity. This principle also works if an orthosis such as in WO 0028927 is attached to the legs of the patient.
For the force-based adjustment of the treadmill velocity, only a force component 100 has to be considered in the controller 5. The force component 100 is longitudinal, whereas longitudinal is horizontal. Several different concepts are possible to measure that force component 100 and are described by means of the following figures.
The force measure means 3 generate a signal according to the value of the reaction force. The signal is submitted to a controller 5 to provide input data for the control circuit. The control circuit will be explained by means of
The axial forces in rods 40 are measured by measure means 3, 4. This arrangement of rods, bearings, and force sensors allows an easy determination of the longitudinal forces 100, whereas it remains independent from the vertical force 102. The horizontal force 100 in walking direction can be computed by the two forces F1 and F2 from the sensors 3 and 4, respectively:
F
longitudinal=(F1−F2)cosβ
The vertical load 102 results from gravitation but also from inertial effects. As this force act in both rods 40 with the same strength but different directions, above-mentioned equation automatically compensates for the vertical force in such way that only the horizontal component 100 remains after correcting the term F1−F2 with factor cosβ.
Due to forces that act also in the transversal (lateral) direction, the measure means 3, 4 have to be chosen accordingly in order to avoid erroneous force sensor output. In particular, this requires a sensor that is able to detect a force in one direction only, which is in that case the direction of the rod. Another possibility is the use of a sensor that measures in two directions, which are in that case in the rod direction and in the transversal (lateral) direction. Note that there is no force acting in the third direction orthogonal to the rods, when assuming that bearings 30 and 42 are frictionless hinge joints.
The angle β can be measured by an angle measurement device as it is known or it can be determined by height measurements of the plate 43 over the base plane 6.
Due to the arrangement of the linkage, the vertical force components 102 are carried by the vertical rods 52. Therefore the force sensor 55 measures only the horizontal component 100 of the reaction force (in longitudinal direction).
In a further arrangement it may be possible that the rod 51 and the rod 51′ have an equal length. Therefore the welding point which connects the horizontal rod 51, and the linker rod 56 is located on one the edge of the linkage 50
During the training a repulsion force between the treadmill 2 and the person 1 occurs. Force measure means 3 measure a reaction force that occurs due to the longitudinal repulsion force.
Additionally to the orthotic device 60 the patient may be supported by a relieve mechanism 80. A suspended weight 81 is arranged on one end of a cable 83. The cable 83 is diverted over two pulleys 82. On the other end the cable 83 is attached to the harness 10 of the patient 1. Due to the weight 81 on one end the patient 1 will be relieved from a part of his own weight. The mass of the weight 81 has to be chosen in accordance of the weight of the patient 1 and in view of his physical condition. An adjustment of the length of the cable 83 is also necessary, but not shown in the drawings.
The mechanical system as shown in
The force 101 is applied to the rod system. The patient 1. is connected via the harness 10 to a cropped rod 73. The cropped rod 73 is connected -to a longitudinal rod 74. A sensor 70 is mounted on the cropped rod 73, this sensor measures the lateral (transversal) component 103 of the force 101, also designated as F2. A longitudinal rod 74 is connected to a transversal rod 72. On one end the transversal rod 72 is connected to a bearing 75, whereas on the other end a sensor rod 78, which lies in longitudinal direction, leads to a further bearing 77. The sensor rod 78 is equipped with a force sensor 71 to measure the horizontal force, also designated as F1. The longitudinal force 100 is determined with the aid of F1 and F2:
The algebraic sign is chosen in such way that pressure forces on the fixation system (patient decelerates) result in negative and tractive forces (patient accelerates) result in positive signals. If the lateral forces measured by sensor 70 are unaccounted for the horizontal and longitudinal force 100, the lateral (transversal) component of the reaction force would be wrongly considered as the longitudinal force 100.
The reaction force that occurs due to the mechanical fixation of the patient 1 is measured by a sensor 201. An electrical signal that may be linear or non-linear to the reaction force is provided by the sensor 201.
The measured force will then be divided by a mass. This is conducted by a divider 202. After the divider a signal {umlaut over (x)}1 results. The value of the mass may be chosen according to the patient's physical condition. When the patient's physical condition is good, the parameter is equal to the body mass in order to provide a realistic situation and walking feeling for the patient. If the patient's motor system is weakened, for example after a surgery, injury or neuromuscular disease, a mass with a value lower than the body mass may be chosen. This will make it easier for the patient, because the force that is required to accelerate and walk will be smaller.
However, if the present invention is used for endurance training or rehabilitation of professional athletes it is possible to adjust the mass in an other range. Preferably a value will be used that is between 1 and 1.5 and especially between 1.2 and 1.5 of the body mass. This relieves the joints of the patient, namely the joints in the persons under part of the body, compared to the training method of fixing additional weights on the person's body.
{umlaut over (x)}1 is integrated by an integrator 203 and a velocity input signal {dot over (x)}1 results. The actual velocity of the treadmill 2 is {dot over (x)}. {dot over (x)}1−{dot over (x)} is fed. into a PD velocity controller 204 that controls the treadmill 2 to provide equal velocities. A PID controller or any other control law may also be used.
The force-based velocity adjustment of the treadmill can be used together with an orthotic device such as the gait-robot according to WO 0028927.
In the most, cases the device according to WO 0028927 is being used in a position-control mode, where the legs of the patient are moved along a predefined, desired trajectory.
The velocity characteristics as shown in
It is noted that the force acting on the patient positioned within his harness is not coming from the harness as such, staying at the same place, but through the movement of the treadmill belt.
The force-based treadmill speed adjustment can also be applied, when the gait-robot according to WO 0028927 is being used in so-called patient-cooperative modes. Here, voluntary intentions and muscular efforts of the patient are detected within the gait-robot system in order to adjust the gait-robot assistance to the patient. Thus, walking pattern and speed are controlled by the patient. Therefore, patient-cooperative strategies require the possibility to automatically adjust the treadmill speed to the patient effort or intention. Treadmill speed adjustment must occur in real-time with minimal delay times.
In
The three strategies comprise, first, impedance control methods that make the gait-robot soft and compliant, second, adaptive control methods that adjust the reference trajectory and/or controller to the individual subject, and, third, a motion reinforcement strategy that supports patient-induced movements.
The PDMR controller enables the subjects to walk with their own walking-speeds and patterns. The device according to WO 0028927 as well as the treadmill speed adapts to the human muscle efforts and supports the movement of the subject's leg, e.g. by compensating for the gravity and velocity dependent effects. Prerequisite for this controller is that the subject has sufficient voluntary force to induce the robot-supported movement.
It has to be anticipated, that running belts are usually reacting with a time delay. Therefore the control unit anticipates these delays within the frame of the control of the drives of the running belt 80.
Due to controlling the treadmill in the way as described above, it is possible to provide a very realistic sensation of walking as the forces that occur during acceleration and deceleration as well as during the decay phase are similar to the forces that occur when the person walks on a fixed ground. The person has to overcome the inertia when changing speed on fixed ground. This inertia does not occur, if the person is not fixed and the treadmill is not controlled as shown in
The sum force will then be divided by a mass by a divider 202. The value of the mass may—as within the embodiment shown in FIG. 7—be chosen according to the patient's physical condition. The resulting value {dot over (x)}1 is integrated by an integrator 203 and a velocity input signal {dot over (x)}1 results. For safety reasons the velocity input signal {dot over (x)}1 can be passed through a saturation block 211, which limits {dot over (x)}1 to positive values. This prevents the treadmill form running in negative running direction when the situation of walking uphill is simulated but the person does not generate any longitudinal force.
The actual velocity of the treadmill 2 being {dot over (x)}, the difference value of {dot over (x)}1s−{dot over (x)} is fed into a PD velocity controller 204. A PID controller or any other control law may also be used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05405570.2 | Oct 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2006/000526 | 9/29/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/9/2009 |