This invention relates to rehabilitative assistive devices. More specifically, this invention provides a method and associated passive gravity-balanced apparatus for facilitating movement by persons suffering from muscle weakness or impaired motor control.
A vast number of people are affected by conditions that result in profound muscle weakness or impaired motor control. For example, people with severe muscle weakness from neurological injury, such as hemiparesis from stroke, often have substantial movement limitations, and for many people, sit-to-stand motion becomes increasingly difficult with age.
One of the aims of rehabilitation after stroke is to improve the walking function. However, equipment available to facilitate this is severely limited. Several lower extremity rehabilitation machines have been developed recently to help retrain gait during walking. Lokomat® is an actively powered exoskeleton, designed for persons with spinal cord injury. The persons use this machine while walking on a treadmill. Mechanized Gait Trainer® (MGT) is a single degree of freedom powered machine that drives the leg to move in a prescribed gait pattern. The machine consists of a foot plate connected to a crank and rocker system. The device simulates the phases of gait, supports the subjects according to their abilities, and controls the center of mass in the vertical and horizontal directions. Auto-Ambulator® is a rehabilitation machine for assisting individuals, with stroke and spinal cord injuries, in leg motion impairments. This machine is designed to replicate the pattern of normal gait.
Sit-to-stand (STS) is one of the most common daily activities. It is a pre-requisite for other functional movements that require ambulation and is mechanically demanding. In the United States, an estimated two million people over age 64 have difficulty in rising from a chair. Functional electrical stimulation (FES) of muscles has been used to assist disabled individuals with STS motion, in particular to assist a paraplegic person to stand from a wheelchair. Handle reactions have also been used as a measure of stimulation of leg muscles during standing up. Powered robotic assistive devices that may incorporate FES have also been designed for standing-up training. KineAssist is a robotic device for gait and balance training. It is a microprocessor controlled, motor actuated device that provides partial body weight support and postural torques on the torso.
The use of these gait-training and sit-to-stand machines is limited in that they require external power to function, posing increased risk to the user, and require supervisory staff for safe use. Additionally, they only move persons through predetermined movement patterns rather than allowing them to move under their own control. The failure to allow persons to experience and practice appropriate movement prevents necessary changes in the nervous system to promote relearning of typical patterns. There is, therefore, a need for a rehabilitation device that provides passive assistance, supports a person according to his/her abilities and allows the person to move using his/her own muscle power.
Gravity balancing is often used in industrial machines to decrease the required actuator efforts during motion, but has rarely been used for assistive rehabilitation devices. A machine is said to be gravity balanced if joint actuator torques are not needed to keep the system in equilibrium in any configuration. Gravity balancing is a useful principle that can assist a user in walking and in STS activity. In STS motion the required joint torques are due to gravity, passive muscle forces, and inertia. Because STS movement is relatively slow, the joint torque due to gravity is the most dominant. A gravity-balancing apparatus does not require power and keeps the human body in neutral equilibrium during the entire range of motion, reducing the amount of effort needed for the motion. A gravity-balancing apparatus may be used as a functional rehabilitative aid, a training device, or an evaluation tool for the study of specific types of motion.
There is provided according to this invention equipment that allows persons to use their impaired muscles to move their limbs under their own power by balancing the effects of gravity on the afflicted limbs thereby reducing the effort needed to use such limb(s). Such balancing is achieved by transferring the weight of the afflicted limbs to a support external to the limbs, such as, for example a harness worn by the person or a supporting structure forming part of a complete training system.
In its broader aspects the invention encompasses a method and an apparatus for assisting a person to move from a seated to a standing position, comprising an articulated passive gravity balanced assistive device for assisting a person to move from a first seated position to a second standing position, said person having an ankle, a calf, a thigh and a torso, the device comprising a fixed primary supporting point; a first member adapted to be attached to said calf having a first and a second end, a second member pivotally connected at one end thereof to said first member second end and adapted to be attached to said thigh, and a third member pivotally connected to another end of said second member and adapted to be attached to said torso, said members each comprising a scale length attachment point; a parallelogram structure connecting said scale length attachment points on each of said first, second and third members to a combined center of mass of said plurality of pivotally connected members and said calf, thigh and torso attached thereto, said parallelogram structure comprising first, second and third parallelograms interconnecting said scale attachment points on said first second and third members and said combined center of mass, each comprising a spring extending between opposite corners thereof, and a supporting spring extending between said center of mass and said primary supporting point; wherein said springs are selected such that the total potential energy of the articulated system is invariant with member configuration.
There is also provided according to this invention, a method for assisting a person to move from a first seated position to a second standing position comprising transferring a weight supported on a pivoting support on a first supporting structure to a primary support, said weight comprising a weight of at least three interconnected articulated members pivotally attached to said pivoting support, each of said articulated members removably attached to said person's calf, thigh and torso respectively, the method comprising:
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments, the invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the invention. The figures and drawings are not to scale and only include those elements that are necessary in describing and explaining the invention. Such figures are not intended to replace complete engineering drawings.
Gravity balancing, according to this invention, is achieved by fixing a center of mass (COM) of combined articulated members and supported weight of the body in space using a parallelogram mechanism, and then making the total potential energy for any configuration of the articulated members of the system constant using springs. The principle involved in removing the weight of the leg, for example, is to support the weight of the leg using articulated members attached to the thigh and calf and place springs at suitable mathematically calculated positions on the articulated members such that they completely balance the effect of gravity of both the leg and members.
A gravity-balanced assistive device for the human body may be designed by (i) determining the combined COM of the articulated supporting members and attached parts of the human body using auxiliary parallelograms; and (ii) selecting springs to connect the articulated members to the COM such that the total potential energy of the system is invariant with configuration.
In one embodiment, the device is an orthosis device with straps or other convenient attachments between the corresponding moving segments of the device and the person's leg. In this embodiment, the following assumptions are made:
The human body can be modeled during sit-to-stand (STS) motion as having three degrees-of-freedom (DOF) in the sagittal plane at the hip, knee, and ankle, as shown in
To form parallelograms, scaled lengths ds, dt, and dH in each of the articulated members are determined. Scaled lengths dj are determined by geometry and mass distribution. The three scaled lengths are used to form three parallelograms and associated scale length attachment points and to identify the location of the COM C (rOC=dsbs+dtbt+dHbH) are shown in
ds=(1/M) (mtls+mHls+mslcs)
dt=(1/M) (mHlt+mtlct)
dH=(1/M) mHlcH
and where:
M=ms+mt+mH
Having determined the COM of the system, the spring constants are next determined.
V=Vs+Vg=(½)kx2+(½)k1x12+(½)k2x22+(½)k3x32−Mg∘roc.
Upon substitution of
x2=∥PC∥·∥PC∥,
x12=∥O1S1∥·∥O1S1∥,
x22=∥CS3∥·∥CS3∥ and
x32=∥O2S2∥·∥O2S2∥
and expanding the results thus obtained in terms of joint angles, one obtains:
−Mg∘roc=Mg(dssa+dtsak+dHSakh)
x2=(dsca+dtcak+dHcakh)2+(dssa+dtsak+dHsakh−d)2
x12=dt2+(ls−ds)2−2(ls−ds)dtck
x22=dH2+(ls−ds)2−2dH(ls−ds)ckh
x32=(lt—dt)2+dH2−2dH(lt−dt)ch.
Here, ci, si, cij, sij, cijk and sijk stand for cos θi, sin θi, cos (θi+θj), sin (θi+θj), COS (θi+θj+θk) and sin (θi+θj+θk), respectively. Also, d=∥OP∥ is the distance along the gravity vector between point O and the fixed primary support point P as shown in
Setting next the coefficients of the configuration variables in the potential energy to zero, the desired stiffness of the springs for gravity balancing of the system are derived as:
k=Mg/d
k1=kds/(ls−ds)
k2=kds/(ls−ds)
k3=kdt/(lt−dt).
The length of each articulated member may be adjusted and optimized for the user, using, for example, telescoping members. The primary springs 70 and 70′ connect the centers of mass COM to the frame at the fixed primary supporting points P. The auxiliary springs within the parallelograms have been omitted for clarity; their location and points of attachment are as illustrated in
The embodiment of
a) attaching ankle weights 100 to shift the position of the center of mass of the shank member 110, or
b) countering the weight of the human body using a harness 66 strapped to the torso by any appropriate means and attached to a counterweight W with a cable 120 running over pulleys 74 and 74′. The cable 120 is attached to the harness 66 at the COM of the HAT member (see
c) a combination of the two.
As an alternative to ankle weights 100, other sources of resistance, or opposing force, may be used, such as springs.
As a specific numerical example, if each ankle weight 100 is 3 kg and counterweight W is 23 kg, calculated spring constants are:
k=0.34 kN/m
k1=1.91 kN/m
k2=1.91 kN/m
k3=0.6 kN/m
In this embodiment, calculated required forces exerted by the springs are reduced from those of the first embodiment; by a factor of about 5 for spring k3 up to a factor of about 12 for spring k2.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments, the invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 11/113,729 and claims benefit of priority from U.S. Ser. No. 11/113,729, filed Apr. 25, 2005, and U.S. 60/748,429, filed Dec. 8, 2005, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The work leading to this invention was financed in part by the National Institute of Health (NIH) under a grant NO. 1 RO1 HD38582-01A2.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60748429 | Dec 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11113729 | Apr 2005 | US |
Child | 11409163 | Apr 2006 | US |