The invention relates to a system and a method for cooperative arm therapy, and to a corresponding rotation module.
The prior art discloses a number of systems and methods that can improve the muscle strength and movement coordination of patients suffering from neurological deficits or from orthopedic impairments. Arm therapy also has positive effects in the treatment of stroke patients. Two types of robotic systems in particular are known from the prior art. On the one hand, there are therapeutic systems that are used mainly in hospitals and are thus shared between a number of patients. The second group involves systems that are intended for use at home and that assist an individual patient in his or her daily activities. These systems can be mounted on wheelchairs or tables, for example.
Known systems of these kinds can include passive, active and interactive systems. In passive systems, the limbs are stabilized only passively or are limited in their range of movement. In known systems such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,466,213 or U.S. Pat. No. 5,794,621, the arm is moved indirectly by means of the hand gripping a handle and the latter being moved by the system. These systems have the disadvantage that they record and transmit movements of the forearm and of the upper arm only in an indirectly coupled manner and therefore do not offer any direct guiding of the elbow joint. They move the hand only in the plane of the table and not three-dimensionally. Moreover, with these known systems, it is not possible to specifically train the upper arm or the forearm area.
These systems for arm therapy have a first drive that can be fixedly connected to the device determining the position of a user. The device determining the position of a user can be a chair with a backrest, which secures the back region, or can be a substantially horizontal surface on which the user lies down. The first drive can be arranged directly on this object or on a frame or such like connected to this object. In the abovementioned prior art, the first cuff to be connected to the arm of a user is a wrist cuff, the latter being connected to the first drive.
Starting out from this prior art, the object of the invention is to improve a system and a method of the type mentioned at the outset, in such a way that a greater number of degrees of freedom can be guided and supported.
According to the invention, this object is achieved for a system with the characterizing features according to claim 1. A rotation module according to the invention is defined by the characterizing features of claim 6 or 7. A method according to the invention is defined by the characterizing features of claim 9.
By virtue of the fact that the system engages with a cuff on the upper arm, with force being transmitted via fixed arms, the upper arm can be completely guided. By means of a corresponding connection to the forearm, the elbow joint can be bridged and trained separately.
By virtue of the fact that the cuff is open to the side, the user can more easily introduce his or her arm into the device. This is especially useful for patients who are no longer able to (completely) bend their arm joints because of contractures (stiffened joints) or spasms.
In an advantageous embodiment, the rotation movements of the wrist (pronation/supination) can also be simulated, which is not possible in the known devices.
Further advantageous embodiments are characterized in the dependent claims.
The invention is now explained in greater detail on the basis of illustrative embodiments and with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The robot support 2 is here a mobile element and can be mounted in particular on a chassis with wheels, such that the robot system can be easily displaced. A counterweight 3 that prevents tilting of the system is thus provided. The robot support is intended to receive the rail of a linear drive 11. It is of course also possible to secure the linear drive 11 directly on a wall, on a framework, etc. The linear drive 11 is intended to move a horizontally positioned jib 12 up and down in a vertically oriented plane. A simple solution of the linear drive 11 is a ball spindle, which is connected to the ship of the linear drive 11 and is driven by a motor. The ship of the linear drive 11 is, for example, mounted by ball bearings on a monorail. The horizontal jib 12, in this case arranged perpendicular to the framework 2 and thus to the axis of the linear drive 11, connects the ship of the linear drive 11 to the orthosis 16-23, 28-37 and 38-52, that is to say to the following elements: upper arm rotation module, elbow rotation module, forearm rotation module, and connecting pieces. These parts can be made of aluminum, for example, in order to reduce their weight while at the same time ensuring sufficient stiffness.
The second drive 26, coupled via the force sensor 27, drives the upper supporting connection 13. The upper supporting connection 13 connects a supporting connection 14 to the force sensor 27. The supporting connection 14 can rotate freely about the horizontal axis, corresponding to a passive degree of freedom. The supporting connection 13 can be formed by a shaft mounted on two ball bearings.
The supporting connection 14 connects the upper arm rotation module, in particular the outer half-cylinder 16 thereof, to the force sensor 27. A supporting connection 14 made of aluminum is again advantageously chosen for reasons relating to the weight of the material and its stiffness. The supporting connection 14 preferably has a length adjustment mechanism (not shown in the drawings), which permits a length adjustment of the supporting connection, such that the system can easily be used for patients 4 with different arm. lengths. As in the illustrative embodiment depicted here, the supporting connection 14 can be composed of three round rods, which can be recessed to a greater or lesser extent into the aluminum body (top and bottom) of the supporting connection 14.
The lower supporting connection 15 connects the supporting connection 14 to the upper arm rotation module and, like the upper supporting connection 13, is advantageously composed of a shaft mounted on two ball bearings. In functional terms, this is a hinge joint obtained with the aid of two ball joints.
The upper arm rotation module is formed in particular by an outer half-cylinder 16 and an inner half-cylinder 17, the function of which will be explained in more detail with reference to
A third drive 29 is arranged on the outer half-cylinder 16, parallel to said connecting rail 18. A torque sensor 28 is arranged in front of said third drive 29, and an encoder 30 for the third axis is arranged behind it. The encoders mentioned here for the various axes serve as signal transmitters for the control electronics for establishing the position and for feedback and control of the drives. The torque sensor 28 of the third axis measures the torque delivered by the third drive 29 and is advantageously formed by a strain gauge. The third drive 29 delivers the torque for an internal and external shoulder rotation, as will be explained below. The third encoder 30 measures the position of the third axis and is advantageously an optical encoder.
The connecting rail 18 from the upper arm to the elbow is fitted into the elbow half-cylinder 22 which is located near the upper arm and on which there is a fourth drive 32 with a torque sensor 33 for the fourth axis and with an encoder 31 for the fourth axis. The axis of rotation of this drive, crosses the axis of symmetry of the upper arm rotation module centrally and at right angles. The forearm cuff 9 is secured on the half-cylinder 23 of the elbow located near the wrist and engaging in said elbow half-cylinder 22 near the upper arm. The half-cylinder 23 near the upper arm is connected via the connecting rail 19 and via the torque sensor 37 to the outer half-cylinder 20 of the forearm rotation module.
The forearm rotation module is composed of the inner cylinder 21, which rotates in the outer half-cylinder 20 and thus permits the pronation/supination of the forearm. For this purpose, a fifth drive 35 is provided on the outer half-cylinder 20 and forms a unit together with a torque sensor 36 of the fifth axis and with a fifth encoder 34.
The torque of the fifth drive 35 can be measured redundantly both with the torque sensor 36 and also with the torque sensor 37. The sensor 27 measures the torques of the drives 25, 26 and 29.
The object depicted in
As has been stated, the upper arm rotation module is composed of an outer half-cylinder 16 and of an inner half-cylinder 17. The outer half-cylinder 16 is composed of a central retaining wall 42 on which two eyelets 39 are provided for securing the lower supporting connection 15. The retaining wall 42 positions the outer walls 41 and 43 of the upper arm rotation module that are each placed laterally on the wall 42. The motor-side outer wall of the upper arm rotation module is provided with an opening 38 for the shaft of the drive 29, which drives the cables, of which there are in this case three 45, 46 and 47, via the cable drive flange 44. The cable drive flange can, for example, be an aluminum pin roughened by sandblasting. The drive cables 45, 46 and 47 transmit the rotation movement of the cable drive flange 44 to the inner half-cylinder 17 of the upper arm rotation module.
The pretensioning of the cable can be regulated by a setting screw (not shown here). To achieve the greatest possible step-down ratio, several cables are used, in this case three. In this way, the load is distributed among these three cables, and it is possible to use thinner cables 45, 46 and 47 with smaller bending radii. A greater step-down ratio can thus be achieved, which is calculated from the ratio between the external diameter of the inner half-cylinder 17 of the upper arm rotation module and the external diameter of the cable drive flange 44. On the motor side, that is to say on the left in
Instead of the cables 45, 46, 47 shown here and secured on the outer surface of the inner cylinder 17, they can also each be secured on the inside wall of the outer cylinder 16. The cable drive flange 44 is then secured on a drive that is secured on the inner hollow-cylinder part 17.
In another embodiment, it is also possible to have two pairs of cables lying opposite one another (in other words two halves 46), in which case, when the flange 44 is turned in one direction, one cable is wound up and the diametrally opposite cable unwound; the flange 44 then works as a roller. The module shown in the illustrative embodiments has the advantage, however, that the wire can be more easily guided in the small space between the hollow-cylinder parts 16 and 17 and does not have to be wound up on the flange 44.
In another embodiment not shown in the drawings, the cables 45 to 47 can also be replaced by a V-belt. The V-belt is secured in the area of the ends of the hollow cylinder 17. The V-belt has knobs and is guided round the drive flange, which also has knobs and ensures a clearance-free contact with the belt.
Finally, it is also possible in principle to provide a curved toothed rod, which is arranged on the cylinder and into which a suitably driven toothed wheel or spindle engages.
The devices shown here are each provided for training the right arm of a user 4. If the opening of the cuff 8 of the upper arm rotation module is directed downward, it is necessary simply to switch the elbow drive and the forearm rotation module and change the handle to a left hand. If the cuff 8 of the upper arm rotation module has a lateral opening, it is also possible alternatively for the upper arm rotation module to be rotated through 180 degrees along the axis of the upper arm.
The schematic view shows some of the ten inner ball bearings 48 and some of the ten outer ball bearings 49. There are also twelve lateral ball bearings 50. The lateral ball bearings 50 are in contact with the polished outer edge of the inner half-cylinder 17. In this way they guide the half-cylinder 17. Depending on the position of the inner half-cylinder 17, four or five ball bearings have contact. The ball bearings 48 and 49 lie on the outer end of steel pins, while the other end is inserted and fixed into the respective outer wall 41, 43 of the upper arm rotation module. The ball bearings 50 are likewise held by steel pins. The ball bearings lie in the center of the steel pins which, at both ends, are connected to the respective outer wall 41, 42 of the upper arm rotation module by means of screws that lie perpendicular to the steel pin. The steel pins thus come to lie parallel to the outer wall. Cuttings are formed in the outer wall to allow the ball bearings to turn freely. These ball bearings 50 are held by steel pins that are fixed on the inside face of the respective outer wall 41, 43 of the upper arm rotation module.
Completely conventional types of ball bearings can be used. These ball bearings 50, together with the inner and outer ball bearings 48 and 49, determine the position of the inner half-cylinder 17. The combination of ball bearings limits the movement of the inner half cylinder 17 to a rotation about the center of the half-cylinder 17. During this rotation, there is no sliding friction, but only a rolling friction in the ball bearings 48, 49 and 50. The ball bearings 48 are each mounted on a steel pin, which is fixed on the outer wall 41, 43. The ball bearings 49 are mounted such that they can be easily displaced relative to the inner ball bearing 48. Both ball bearings 48 and 49 are mounted inside the side slit 52 of the half-cylinder 17, which can be clearly seen in
It will be clear from the description that the rotation module with the inner half-cylinder 17 and outer half-cylinder 18 is statically overdetermined. For this reason, the individual components have to be produced with a high degree of precision. In other embodiments of the invention, it is also possible to have fewer ball bearings, such that the system is not overdetermined, or the ball bearings can be mounted resiliently if the spring forces are greater than the externally applied bearing loads.
The term half-cylinder in this context does not mean a half cylinder that covers a spatial angle of 180 degrees. The term half-cylinder here means a hollow rotation body which has a substantially cylindrical jacket and which covers an angle of between 130 and 210 degrees. The securing of the cable arrangement permits at most one rotation about this angle minus the angle range necessary for the mounting of the cables. Since this differs depending on the module (upper arm/elbow/wrist), a movement angle for a rotation in the range of approximately 110 to 190 degrees can be covered. The unit can also be designated as a hollow-cylinder part element.
Although the principle of the components described here is to some extent known from the sensors and robots used in industrial robot technology, the features presented here are of a different scope, particularly since they have to comply with medical regulations when used on patients.
The most important elements of the solution of the system are that the distal part of the system is constructed as an exoskeleton. The patient's arm is connected to the system at exactly three places with biocompatible cuffs 8, 9 and 10. The version described in the illustrative embodiment presented here comprises five actuated degrees of freedom (four without actuated forearm cuff) and permits flexion and extension of the elbow joint and spatial shoulder movements about three degrees of freedom. It also permits pronation/supination of the wrist 7.
The advantage of the ball bearings 48, 49 and 50 is not only the smooth and clearance-free rotation of the inner half-cylinder 17 in the outer half-cylinder 18, but also the fact that they take up the tilting movements caused by the orthosis by its free movement in space with correspondingly long lever arms from the center of the forearm (eyelets 39) to the attachment in the area of the wrist 7, such that basically only rolling friction occurs.
There are basically two technical possibilities for producing the inner cylinder and outer cylinder 16/17; 20/21; 22/23, that is to say the fundamental hollow rotation body. One possibility is the turning of a full cylinder, which is then cut open. In the illustrative embodiment presented here, the rotation body has by contrast been milled from a block, since the rotation body, in the case of cutting open a full cylinder after it has been turned to its dimensions, can change in shape because of possible stresses in the original aluminum block. A suitable milling machine has a precision of one micron. The optimal width of the groove 52 for the ball bearings was then approximated in small milling steps.
The advantage of the system according to the invention is that it can move the shoulder, approximated through three rotatory degrees of freedom, and the elbow, approximated through one rotatory degree of freedom, directly and without restriction. A further degree of freedom is afforded by the pronation/supination of the forearm. The illustrative embodiment according to the invention has a low inertia, little friction and minimal play. The actuators are advantageously able to reach the hand of the patient 4 with a tangential speed of up to 1 meter per second, thus applying an acceleration of approximately gravitational acceleration both in acceleration and also in braking.
The linear drive 11 with the first axis and with the first drive 25 permits the abduction and adduction of the shoulder. The rotation of the shoulder in the horizontal plane is realized with a second rotation drive 26. This drive 26 is connected directly to the ship of the linear drive 11. The rotation module has a third drive 29 and permits the internal and external shoulder rotation, since it is connected by a cuff 10 to the upper arm of the patient 4. The elbow flexion and elbow extension are ensured by means of a fourth rotation drive 32, with a cuff 9 being connected to the elbow area of the patient 4. Finally, the pronation/supination is permitted by means of a fifth rotation drive 35, with a cuff 8 being connected to the wrist area 7 of the patient 4.
By virtue of the two non-actuated degrees of freedom, the system is statically determined only in combination with the patient's arm when the orthosis is connected to the linear module 11. Thus, pretensioning between the robot and the patient's arm can be effectively ruled out.
Two control types can be provided in particular. For example, any desired free movement of the patient's arm can be permitted, recorded and stored, in which case the respective encoders of the different drives record the axis position and store it in a memory unit. It is thus possible, by direct control of the relevant drives according to the stored encoder positions, to repeat a previously executed movement completely and identically. It is also possible, by moving a patient's arm, to record its existing mobility and store this as a limit value for a movement program.
It is possible to provide for each user a so-called patient-cooperative control. In such a setup, impedance and admittance control principles are used as a basis for detecting the existing voluntomotoricity of the patient and taking this into consideration in the movement calculation. This means that the effort by the patient to follow a movement predefined by the control is taken into account by the fact that the corresponding actuators help the user less to complete the movement.
For this patient-cooperative control, the sensor signals of the position sensors and of the force sensors are evaluated. By means of the data signals of the sensors, it is possible for the control electronics to provide a feed-back controlled movement. It is advantageous in particular to provide a screen with a display for presenting an image of the arm of the patient 4, such that start points and target points can be shown in order to convert, with the control electronics, the read-out encoder signals into a corresponding image display.
It is clear that various changes and modifications can be made to the device and to the proposed method, without thereby departing from the scope of the present invention as set forth in the attached patent claims.
1 chair
2 robot support
3 counterweight
4 patient
5 patient's upper arm
6 patient's forearm
7 patient's hand
8 wrist cuff
9 forearm cuff
10 upper arm cuff
11 linear drive
12 jib
13 upper supporting connection
14 supporting connection
15 lower supporting connection
16 outer half-cylinder of upper arm rotation module
17 inner half-cylinder of upper arm rotation module
18 connecting rail—upper arm to elbow
19 connecting rail—elbow to forearm
20 outer half-cylinder of forearm rotation module
21 inner half-cylinder of forearm rotation module
22 half-cylinder of elbow rotation module near upper arm
23 half-cylinder of elbow rotation module near wrist
25 drive module with first drive
26 second drive
27 6-DOF force sensor
28 torque sensor of third axis
29 third drive
30 encoder of third axis
31 encoder of fourth axis
32 fourth drive
33 torque sensor of fourth axis
34 encoder of fifth axis
35 fifth drive
36 torque sensor of fifth axis
37 further torque sensor of fifth axis
38 opening
39 eyelet
41 motor-side outer wall of upper arm rotation module
42 side wall of upper arm rotation module
43 distal outer wall of upper arm rotation module
44 cable drive flange
45 first drive cable
46 second drive cable
47 third drive cable
48 inner ball bearing
49 outer ball bearing
50 lateral ball bearing
51 anchor point
52 side slit
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04028310.3 | Nov 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2005/000236 | 4/28/2005 | WO | 00 | 7/21/2008 |