Background: Soft robotic exosuits can facilitate immediate increases in short- and long-distance ... more Background: Soft robotic exosuits can facilitate immediate increases in short- and long-distance walking speeds in people with post-stroke hemiparesis. We sought to assess the feasibility and rehabilitative potential of applying propulsion-augmenting exosuits as part of an individualized and progressive training program to retrain faster walking and the underlying propulsive strategy.Methods: A 54-yr old male with chronic hemiparesis completed five daily sessions of Robotic Exosuit Augmented Locomotion (REAL) gait training. REAL training consists of high-intensity, task-specific, and progressively challenging walking practice augmented by a soft robotic exosuit and is designed to facilitate faster walking by way of increased paretic propulsion. Repeated baseline assessments of comfortable walking speed over a 2-year period provided a stable baseline from which the effects of REAL training could be elucidated. Additional outcomes included paretic propulsion, maximum walking speed, an...
Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability, often resulting in a slow and energetically ... more Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability, often resulting in a slow and energetically inefficient gait due to a reduction in push-off power at the end of stance and the inability to lift the foot from the ground during swing (i.e. foot clearance). To improve the quality of life of stroke patients, a soft wearable robot (exosuit) has been developed, which has demonstrated the capacity to improve paretic propulsion, foot clearance and walking efficiency during treadmill walking [1,2].
Hemiparetic walking after stroke is typically slow, asymmetric, and inefficient, significantly im... more Hemiparetic walking after stroke is typically slow, asymmetric, and inefficient, significantly impacting activities of daily living. Extensive research shows that functional, intensive, and task-specific gait training is instrumental for effective gait rehabilitation, characteristics that our group aims to encourage with soft robotic exosuits. However, standard clinical assessments may lack the precision and frequency to detect subtle changes in intervention efficacy during both conventional and exosuit-assisted gait training, potentially impeding targeted therapy regimes. In this paper, we use exosuit-integrated inertial sensors to reconstruct three clinically meaningful gait metrics related to circumduction, foot clearance, and stride length. Our method corrects sensor drift using instantaneous information from both sides of the body. This approach makes our method robust to irregular walking conditions poststroke as well as usable in real-time applications, such as real-time move...
Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically asymmetric and metabolically expensive. Wea... more Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically asymmetric and metabolically expensive. Weakness and impaired control of the paretic ankle contribute to reduced forward propulsion and ground clearance-walking subtasks critical for safe and efficient locomotion. Targeted gait interventions that improve paretic ankle function after stroke are therefore warranted. We have developed textile-based, soft wearable robots that transmit mechanical power generated by off-board or body-worn actuators to the paretic ankle using Bowden cables (soft exosuits) and have demonstrated the exosuits can overcome deficits in paretic limb forward propulsion and ground clearance, ultimately reducing the metabolic cost of hemiparetic walking. This study elucidates the biomechanical mechanisms underlying exosuit-induced reductions in metabolic power. We evaluated the relationships between exosuit-induced changes in the body center of mass (COM) power generated by each limb, individual joint powers, an...
Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically slow and metabolically expensive. Passive a... more Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically slow and metabolically expensive. Passive assistive devices such as ankle-foot orthoses are often prescribed to increase function and independence after stroke; however, walking remains highly impaired despite-and perhaps because of-their use. We sought to determine whether a soft wearable robot (exosuit) designed to supplement the paretic limb's residual ability to generate both forward propulsion and ground clearance could facilitate more normal walking after stroke. Exosuits transmit mechanical power generated by actuators to a wearer through the interaction of garment-like, functional textile anchors and cable-based transmissions. We evaluated the immediate effects of an exosuit actively assisting the paretic limb of individuals in the chronic phase of stroke recovery during treadmill and overground walking. Using controlled, treadmill-based biomechanical investigation, we demonstrate that exosuits can function in synchro...
2015 IEEE International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics (ICORR), 2015
In this paper, we present the first application of a soft exosuit to assist walking after stroke.... more In this paper, we present the first application of a soft exosuit to assist walking after stroke. The exosuit combines textile garments with cable driven actuators and is lighter and more compliant as compared to traditional rigid exoskeletons. By avoiding the use of rigid elements, exosuits offer greater comfort, facilitate donning/doffing, and do not impose kinematic restrictions on the wearer-all while retaining the ability to generate significant moments at target joints during walking. The stroke-specific exosuit adapted from previous exosuit designs provides unilateral assistance to the paretic limb during walking. This paper describes strokespecific design considerations, the design of the textile components, the development of a research-focused, mobile off-board actuation unit capable of testing the exosuit in a variety of walking conditions, a real-time gait detection and control algorithm, and proof-of-principle data validating the use of the exosuit in the chronic stroke population. Ultimately, we demonstrate reliable tracking of poststroke gait, appropriate timing of assistive forces, and improvements in key gait metrics. These preliminary results demonstrate the feasibility and promise of exosuits for poststroke gait assistance and training. Future work will involve the creation of a portable, body-worn system based on the specifications obtained from such feasibility studies that will enable community-based rehabilitation.
Background: Soft robotic exosuits can facilitate immediate increases in short- and long-distance ... more Background: Soft robotic exosuits can facilitate immediate increases in short- and long-distance walking speeds in people with post-stroke hemiparesis. We sought to assess the feasibility and rehabilitative potential of applying propulsion-augmenting exosuits as part of an individualized and progressive training program to retrain faster walking and the underlying propulsive strategy.Methods: A 54-yr old male with chronic hemiparesis completed five daily sessions of Robotic Exosuit Augmented Locomotion (REAL) gait training. REAL training consists of high-intensity, task-specific, and progressively challenging walking practice augmented by a soft robotic exosuit and is designed to facilitate faster walking by way of increased paretic propulsion. Repeated baseline assessments of comfortable walking speed over a 2-year period provided a stable baseline from which the effects of REAL training could be elucidated. Additional outcomes included paretic propulsion, maximum walking speed, an...
Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability, often resulting in a slow and energetically ... more Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability, often resulting in a slow and energetically inefficient gait due to a reduction in push-off power at the end of stance and the inability to lift the foot from the ground during swing (i.e. foot clearance). To improve the quality of life of stroke patients, a soft wearable robot (exosuit) has been developed, which has demonstrated the capacity to improve paretic propulsion, foot clearance and walking efficiency during treadmill walking [1,2].
Hemiparetic walking after stroke is typically slow, asymmetric, and inefficient, significantly im... more Hemiparetic walking after stroke is typically slow, asymmetric, and inefficient, significantly impacting activities of daily living. Extensive research shows that functional, intensive, and task-specific gait training is instrumental for effective gait rehabilitation, characteristics that our group aims to encourage with soft robotic exosuits. However, standard clinical assessments may lack the precision and frequency to detect subtle changes in intervention efficacy during both conventional and exosuit-assisted gait training, potentially impeding targeted therapy regimes. In this paper, we use exosuit-integrated inertial sensors to reconstruct three clinically meaningful gait metrics related to circumduction, foot clearance, and stride length. Our method corrects sensor drift using instantaneous information from both sides of the body. This approach makes our method robust to irregular walking conditions poststroke as well as usable in real-time applications, such as real-time move...
Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically asymmetric and metabolically expensive. Wea... more Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically asymmetric and metabolically expensive. Weakness and impaired control of the paretic ankle contribute to reduced forward propulsion and ground clearance-walking subtasks critical for safe and efficient locomotion. Targeted gait interventions that improve paretic ankle function after stroke are therefore warranted. We have developed textile-based, soft wearable robots that transmit mechanical power generated by off-board or body-worn actuators to the paretic ankle using Bowden cables (soft exosuits) and have demonstrated the exosuits can overcome deficits in paretic limb forward propulsion and ground clearance, ultimately reducing the metabolic cost of hemiparetic walking. This study elucidates the biomechanical mechanisms underlying exosuit-induced reductions in metabolic power. We evaluated the relationships between exosuit-induced changes in the body center of mass (COM) power generated by each limb, individual joint powers, an...
Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically slow and metabolically expensive. Passive a... more Stroke-induced hemiparetic gait is characteristically slow and metabolically expensive. Passive assistive devices such as ankle-foot orthoses are often prescribed to increase function and independence after stroke; however, walking remains highly impaired despite-and perhaps because of-their use. We sought to determine whether a soft wearable robot (exosuit) designed to supplement the paretic limb's residual ability to generate both forward propulsion and ground clearance could facilitate more normal walking after stroke. Exosuits transmit mechanical power generated by actuators to a wearer through the interaction of garment-like, functional textile anchors and cable-based transmissions. We evaluated the immediate effects of an exosuit actively assisting the paretic limb of individuals in the chronic phase of stroke recovery during treadmill and overground walking. Using controlled, treadmill-based biomechanical investigation, we demonstrate that exosuits can function in synchro...
2015 IEEE International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics (ICORR), 2015
In this paper, we present the first application of a soft exosuit to assist walking after stroke.... more In this paper, we present the first application of a soft exosuit to assist walking after stroke. The exosuit combines textile garments with cable driven actuators and is lighter and more compliant as compared to traditional rigid exoskeletons. By avoiding the use of rigid elements, exosuits offer greater comfort, facilitate donning/doffing, and do not impose kinematic restrictions on the wearer-all while retaining the ability to generate significant moments at target joints during walking. The stroke-specific exosuit adapted from previous exosuit designs provides unilateral assistance to the paretic limb during walking. This paper describes strokespecific design considerations, the design of the textile components, the development of a research-focused, mobile off-board actuation unit capable of testing the exosuit in a variety of walking conditions, a real-time gait detection and control algorithm, and proof-of-principle data validating the use of the exosuit in the chronic stroke population. Ultimately, we demonstrate reliable tracking of poststroke gait, appropriate timing of assistive forces, and improvements in key gait metrics. These preliminary results demonstrate the feasibility and promise of exosuits for poststroke gait assistance and training. Future work will involve the creation of a portable, body-worn system based on the specifications obtained from such feasibility studies that will enable community-based rehabilitation.
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Papers by Jaehyun Bae