Gait rehabilitation machines based on programmable footplates

Henning Schmidt, Cordula Werner, Rolf Bernhardt, Stefan Hesse, Jörg Krüger, Henning Schmidt, Cordula Werner, Rolf Bernhardt, Stefan Hesse, Jörg Krüger

Abstract

Background: Gait restoration is an integral part of rehabilitation of brain lesioned patients. Modern concepts favour a task-specific repetitive approach, i.e. who wants to regain walking has to walk, while tone-inhibiting and gait preparatory manoeuvres had dominated therapy before. Following the first mobilization out of the bed, the wheelchair-bound patient should have the possibility to practise complex gait cycles as soon as possible. Steps in this direction were treadmill training with partial body weight support and most recently gait machines enabling the repetitive training of even surface gait and even of stair climbing.

Results: With treadmill training harness-secured and partially relieved wheelchair-mobilised patients could practise up to 1000 steps per session for the first time. Controlled trials in stroke and SCI patients, however, failed to show a superior result when compared to walking exercise on the floor. Most likely explanation was the effort for the therapists, e.g. manually setting the paretic limbs during the swing phase resulting in a too little gait intensity. The next steps were gait machines, either consisting of a powered exoskeleton and a treadmill (Lokomat, AutoAmbulator) or an electromechanical solution with the harness secured patient placed on movable foot plates (Gait Trainer GT I). For the latter, a large multi-centre trial with 155 non-ambulatory stroke patients (DEGAS) revealed a superior gait ability and competence in basic activities of living in the experimental group. The HapticWalker continued the end effector concept of movable foot plates, now fully programmable and equipped with 6 DOF force sensors. This device for the first time enables training of arbitrary walking situations, hence not only the simulation of floor walking but also for example of stair climbing and perturbations.

Conclusion: Locomotor therapy is a fascinating new tool in rehabilitation, which is in line with modern principles of motor relearning promoting a task-specific repetitive approach. Sophisticated technical developments and positive randomized controlled trials form the basis of a growing acceptance worldwide to the benefits or our patients.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Electromechanical Gait Trainer GT I with movable footplates. The photograph on the left shows gait rehabilitation with stroke patient, the technical sketch on the right shows the functional principle of the machine.
Figure 2
Figure 2
DEGAS multi-center-RCT results comparing GT I based training with conventional gait training (Group A: GT I + PT, Group B: PT only). The diagram on the left shows the Functional Ambulation Category score (FAC, 0–5), the diagram on the right shows the Barthel Index (0–100).
Figure 3
Figure 3
HapticWalker with SCI patient and physiotherapist. Photograph of the robotic walking simulator for gait rehabilitation HapticWalker.

References

    1. Kolominsky-Rabas PL, Sarti C, Heuschmann PU, Graf C, Siemonsen S, Neundoerfer B, Katalinic A, Lang E, Gassman KG, von Stockert TR. A prospective community-based study of stroke in Germany: the Erlangen Stroke Project (ESPro): incidence and case fatality at 1, 3, and 12 months. Stroke. 1998:2501–2506.
    1. Carr JH, Shepherd RB. Neurological Rehabilitation: Optimizing Motor Performance. Butterworth-Heinemann; 1998.
    1. Asanuma H, Keller A. Neurobiological basis of motor learning and memory. Concepts Neuroscience. 1991;2:1–30.
    1. Hesse S, Helm B, Krajnik J, Gregoric M, Mauritz KH. Treadmill training with partial body weight support: influence of body weight release on the gait of hemiparetic patients. J Neurol Rehab. 1997;11:15–20.
    1. Carr JH, Shepherd RB. A Motor Relearning Programme for Stroke. 2. Aspen Publishers; 1987.
    1. Sackley CM, Lincoln NB. Physiotherapy for stroke patients: a survey of current practice. Physiother Theor Pract. 1996. pp. 87–96.
    1. Dietz V, Colombo G, Jensen L. Locomotor activity in spinal man. Lancet. 1994;344:1260–1263.
    1. Hesse S, Bertelt C, Jahnke MT, Schaffrin A, Baake P, Malezic M, Mauritz KH. Treadmill training with partial body weight support as compared to physiotherapy in non-ambulatory hemiparetic patients. Stroke. 1995;26:976–981.
    1. Moseley AM, Stark A, Cameron ID, Pollock A. Treadmill training and body weight support for walking after stroke. The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2005;3
    1. Hesse S, Uhlenbrock D. A mechanized gait trainer for restoration of gait. Journal of Rehabilitation Research & Development. 2000;37:710–708.
    1. Colombo G, Joerg M, Schreier R, Dietz V. Treadmill training of paraplegic patients using a robotic orthosis. Journal of Rehabilitation Research & Development. 2000;37:693–700.
    1. HealthSouth Corporation Powered gait orthosis and method of utilizing same. US Patent: 6,689,075. 2004.
    1. Reinkensmeyer DJ, Wynne JH, Harkema SJ. A robotic tool for studying locomotor adaptation and rehabilitation. Proceedings of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Conference (EMBC), Houston, TX, USA. 2002.
    1. Veneman JF, Ekkelenkamp R, Kruidhof R, van der Helm FCT, van der Kooij H. Design of a Series Elastic- and Bowdencable-based actuation system for use as torque-actuator in exoskeleton-type training. Proceedings of the IEEE 9th International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics (ICORR), Chicago, IL, USA. 2005. pp. 496–499.
    1. Montagu A. Touching: The Human Significance of the Skin. 3. Harper & Row Publishers; 1986.
    1. Hesse S, Werner C, Uhlenbrock D, v Frankenberg S, Bardeleben A, Brandl-Hesse B. An Electromechanical Gait Trainer for Restoration of Gait in Hemiparetic Stroke Patients: Preliminary Results. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair. 2001;15:39–50.
    1. Wirz M, Zemon DH, Rupp R, Scheel A, Colombo G, Dietz V, Hornby TG. Effectiveness of automated locomotor training in patients with chronic incomplete spinal cord injury: a multicenter trial. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2005;86:672–680.
    1. Werner C, Pohl M, Holzgrefe M, Kroczek G, Mehrholz J, Wingendorf I, Hölig G, Hesse S. "DEGAS" – Deutsche Gangtrainerstudie zur Evaluation des Gangtrainer GT I in Kombination mit Physiotherapie im Vergleich zur Physiotherapie alleine bei akuten Schlaganfallpatienten. Neurologie & Rehabilitation 4/2004, Proceedings of 'Evidence-Based Medicine in Neurorehabilitation', 3rd Joint Congress of the Swiss, Austrian and German Societies of Neurological Rehabilitation, Zurich, Switzerland. 2004. p. S45.
    1. Pohl M, Werner C, Holzgraefe M, Kroczek G, Mehrholz J, Wingendorf I, Hölig G, Koch R, Hesse S. Repetitive locomotor training and physiotherapy improve walking and basic activities of daily living after stroke: a single-blind, randomized multicentre trial (DEutsche GAngtrainerStudie, DEGAS) Clinical Rehabilitation. 2007;21:17–27.
    1. Holden MK, Gill KM, Magliozzi MR, Nathan J, Piehl-Baker L. Clinical gait assessment in the neurologically impaired: reliability and meaningfulness. Physical Therapy. 1984;64:35–40.
    1. Collen FM, Wade DT, Gradshaw CM. Mobility after stroke: reliability of measures of impairment and disability. International Disability Studies. 1990;12:6–9.
    1. Mahoney FI, Barthel DW. Functional evaluation: The Barthel Index. Maryland State Medical Journal. 1965. pp. 56–61.
    1. Globokar D. Gait trainer in neurorehabilitation of patients after stroke. Proceedings of the 3rd World Congress of the International Society of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (ISPRM) 2005, Sao Paulo, Brazil. 2005. p. 166. Abstract 987-1.
    1. Jang SJ, Park SW, Kim ES, Wee HM, Kim YH. Electromechanical gait trainer for restoring gait in hemiparetic stroke patients. Proceedings of the 3rd World Congress of the International Society of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (ISPRM) 2005, Sao Paulo, Brazil. 2005. p. 270. Abstract 909-1.
    1. Li LSW, Tong RKY, Ng MFW, So EFM. Gait training by mechanical gait trainer and functional electrical stimulation for subacute stroke patients: a randomised controlled study. Proceedings of the 3rd World Congress of the International Society of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (ISPRM) 2005, Sao Paulo, Brazil. 2005. p. 78. Abstract 347-1.
    1. Peurala SH, Tarkka IM, Pitkänen K, Sivenius J. The effectiveness of body weight-supported gait training and floor walking in patients with chronic stroke. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2005;85:1557–1564.
    1. Lordahl DS, Archer EJ. Transfer effects on a rotary pursuit task as a function of first task difficulty. Journal of Experiomental Psychology. 1958;56:421–426.
    1. Cormier SM, Hagman JD. Transfer of Learning: Contemporary research applications. Academic Press, New York; 1987.
    1. Schmidt RA, Lee TD. Motor Control and Learning. 3. Human Kinetics Publishers, Inc; 1998.
    1. Roston GP, Peurach T. A whole body kinesthetic display device for virtual reality applications. Proc of IEEE Intl Conf on Robotics & Automation (ICRA), Albuqerque, NM, USA. 1997. pp. 3006–3011.
    1. Hollerbach JM. Locomotion Interfaces. In: Stanney KM, editor. Handbook of Virtual Environments: Design, Implementation, and Applications. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc; 2002. pp. 239–254.
    1. Iwata H, Yano H, Nakaizuni F. GaitMaster: A Versatile Locomotion Interface for Uneven Virtual Terrain. Proc of IEEE Virtual Reality Conference, Yokohama, Japan. 2001. pp. 131–137.
    1. Shiozawa N, Arima S, Makikawa M. Virtual Walkway System and Prediction of Gait Mode Transition for the Control of the Gait Simulator. Proceedings of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Conference (EMBC), San Francisco, CA, USA. 2004.
    1. Boian RF, Bouzit M, Burdea GC, Deutsch JE. Dual Stewart Platform Mobility Simulator. Proceedings of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Conference (EMBC), San Francisco, CA, USA. 2004. pp. 4848–4851.
    1. Behrman AL, Harkema SJ. Locomotor training after human spinal cord injury: A series of case studies. Physical Therapy. 2000;80:688–700.
    1. Schmidt H, Hesse S, Bernhardt R, Krüger J. HapticWalker – A novel Haptic Foot Device. ACM Transactions on Applied Perception. 2005;2:166–180.

Source: PubMed

3
Abonneren