Walking with functional electrical stimulation and unlocking braces in thoracic-level paraplegia
Author(s) -
Jacques Bobet,
SuLing Chong,
Robert Rolf,
Richard B. Stein
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of automatic control
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2406-0984
pISSN - 1450-9903
DOI - 10.2298/jac1301027b
Subject(s) - physical medicine and rehabilitation , trunk , kinematics , functional electrical stimulation , paraplegia , ankle , preferred walking speed , medicine , heart rate , swing , ground reaction force , balance (ability) , stimulation , physical therapy , physics , anatomy , spinal cord , ecology , radiology , classical mechanics , psychiatry , blood pressure , acoustics , biology
Walking was tested in 4 people with thoracic-level paraplegia using stimulation of quadriceps muscles, the flexor reflex and unlocking knee-ankle-foot orthoses (KAFO). Heart rate, speed, distance, kinematics and ground reaction forces were measured while subjects walked using a walker. None of the subjects could walk without the system; all could walk continuously for at least 4 minutes with it. Joint angles and some other kinematic features resembled normal walking, but the walking was too slow (average speed: 3.8 m/min.) and too demanding (heart rate: 128 b/min; physiological cost index: 15 b/m) to be practical. Subjects supported about 1/3 of their weight with their arms during stance and about 2/3 during swing. Our results suggest that the braces reduced the effort needed and that the low speeds were due to both a lack of power at push-off and the time needed to stabilize the hip and trunk. The high heart rates arose from excessive contraction of the arm and trunk muscles for balance and propulsion
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