Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke Patients

This paper aimed at investigating the effects of a novel robotic-aided rehabilitation treatment for the recovery of the upper limb related capabilities in chronic post stroke patients. Eighteen post-stroke patients were enrolled in a six-week therapy program and divided into two groups. They were al...

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Main Authors: Peppino Tropea, Benedetta Cesqui, Vito Monaco, Sara Aliboni, Federico Posteraro, Silvestro Micera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2013-01-01
Series:IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6567887/
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spelling doaj-e76271a5b74947b2be9aa7fef4066ecd2021-03-29T18:37:57ZengIEEEIEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine2168-23722013-01-0112100109210010910.1109/JTEHM.2013.22718986567887Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke PatientsPeppino Tropea0Benedetta Cesqui1Vito Monaco2Sara Aliboni3Federico Posteraro4Silvestro Micera5The BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, ItalyLaboratory of Neuromotor Physiology, Santa Lucia Foundation, Rome, ItalyThe BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, ItalyDepartment of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Ospedale Versilia—Camaiore, Lucca, ItalyNeurological Rehabilitation Unit, Auxilium Vitae Rehabilitation Center, Volterra, ItalyThe BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, ItalyThis paper aimed at investigating the effects of a novel robotic-aided rehabilitation treatment for the recovery of the upper limb related capabilities in chronic post stroke patients. Eighteen post-stroke patients were enrolled in a six-week therapy program and divided into two groups. They were all required to perform horizontal pointing movements both in the presence of a robot-generated divergent force field (DF) that pushed their hands proportional to the trajectory error and perpendicular to the direction of motion, and according to the typical active assistive (AA) approach used in robotic therapy. We used a crossover experimental paradigm where the two groups switched from one therapy treatment to the other. The hypothesis underlying this paper was that the use of the destabilizing scenario forced the patient to keep the end-point position as close as possible to the ideal path, hence requiring a more active control of the arm with respect to the AA approach. Our findings confirmed this hypothesis. In addition, when the DF treatment was provided in the first therapy cycle, patients also showed straighter and smoother paths during the subsequent AA therapy cycle, while this was not true in the opposite case. In conclusion, the results herein reported provide evidence that the use of an unstable DF field can lead to better recovery outcomes, and therefore it potentially more effective than solely active assistance therapy alone.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6567887/Rehabilitation roboticsstrokeassisted-as-needederror-enhancingupper arm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peppino Tropea
Benedetta Cesqui
Vito Monaco
Sara Aliboni
Federico Posteraro
Silvestro Micera
spellingShingle Peppino Tropea
Benedetta Cesqui
Vito Monaco
Sara Aliboni
Federico Posteraro
Silvestro Micera
Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke Patients
IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine
Rehabilitation robotics
stroke
assisted-as-needed
error-enhancing
upper arm
author_facet Peppino Tropea
Benedetta Cesqui
Vito Monaco
Sara Aliboni
Federico Posteraro
Silvestro Micera
author_sort Peppino Tropea
title Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke Patients
title_short Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke Patients
title_full Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke Patients
title_fullStr Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke Patients
title_full_unstemmed Effects of the Alternate Combination of “Error-Enhancing” and “Active Assistive” Robot-Mediated Treatments on Stroke Patients
title_sort effects of the alternate combination of “error-enhancing” and “active assistive” robot-mediated treatments on stroke patients
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine
issn 2168-2372
publishDate 2013-01-01
description This paper aimed at investigating the effects of a novel robotic-aided rehabilitation treatment for the recovery of the upper limb related capabilities in chronic post stroke patients. Eighteen post-stroke patients were enrolled in a six-week therapy program and divided into two groups. They were all required to perform horizontal pointing movements both in the presence of a robot-generated divergent force field (DF) that pushed their hands proportional to the trajectory error and perpendicular to the direction of motion, and according to the typical active assistive (AA) approach used in robotic therapy. We used a crossover experimental paradigm where the two groups switched from one therapy treatment to the other. The hypothesis underlying this paper was that the use of the destabilizing scenario forced the patient to keep the end-point position as close as possible to the ideal path, hence requiring a more active control of the arm with respect to the AA approach. Our findings confirmed this hypothesis. In addition, when the DF treatment was provided in the first therapy cycle, patients also showed straighter and smoother paths during the subsequent AA therapy cycle, while this was not true in the opposite case. In conclusion, the results herein reported provide evidence that the use of an unstable DF field can lead to better recovery outcomes, and therefore it potentially more effective than solely active assistance therapy alone.
topic Rehabilitation robotics
stroke
assisted-as-needed
error-enhancing
upper arm
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6567887/
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