Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor

Abstract Background There is a need for alternative treatment options for tremor patients who do not respond well to medications or surgery, either due to side effects or poor efficacy, or that are excluded from surgery. The study aims to evaluate feasibility of a voluntary-driven, speed-controlled...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gil Herrnstadt, Martin J. McKeown, Carlo Menon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-019-0484-1
id doaj-fb6592aebc6f4aa3ad40edc5f480cf6d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fb6592aebc6f4aa3ad40edc5f480cf6d2020-11-25T01:44:07ZengBMCJournal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation1743-00032019-02-0116111410.1186/s12984-019-0484-1Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremorGil Herrnstadt0Martin J. McKeown1Carlo Menon2Menrva Research Group, Schools of Mechatronic Systems Engineering and Engineering Science, Simon Fraser UniversityDepartment of Medicine (Neurology) and Pacific Parkinson’s Research Centre, University of British ColumbiaMenrva Research Group, Schools of Mechatronic Systems Engineering and Engineering Science, Simon Fraser UniversityAbstract Background There is a need for alternative treatment options for tremor patients who do not respond well to medications or surgery, either due to side effects or poor efficacy, or that are excluded from surgery. The study aims to evaluate feasibility of a voluntary-driven, speed-controlled tremor rejection approach with individuals with pathological tremor. The suppression approach was investigated using a robotic orthosis for suppression of elbow tremor. Importantly, the study emphasizes the performance in relation to the voluntary motion. Methods Nine participants with either Essential Tremor (ET) or Parkinson’s disease (PD) were recruited and tested off medication. The participants performed computerized pursuit tracking tasks following a sinusoid and a random target, both with and without the suppressive orthosis. The impact of the Tremor Suppression Orthosis (TSO) at the tremor and voluntary frequencies was determined by the relative power change calculated from the Power Spectral Density (PSD). Voluntary motion was, in addition, assessed by position and velocity tracking errors. Results The suppressive orthosis resulted in a 94.4% mean power reduction of the tremor (p < 0.001) – a substantial improvement over reports in the literature. As for the impact to the voluntary motion, paired difference tests revealed no statistical effect of the TSO on the relative power change (p = 0.346) and velocity tracking error (p = 0.283). A marginal effect was observed for the position tracking error (p = 0.05). The interaction torque with the robotic orthosis was small (0.62 Nm) when compared to the maximum voluntary torque that can be exerted by adult individuals at the elbow joint. Conclusions Two key contributions of this work are first, a recently proposed approach is evaluated with individuals with tremor demonstrating high levels of tremor suppression; second, the impact of the approach to the voluntary motion is analyzed comprehensively, showing limited inhibition. This study also seeks to address a gap in studies with individuals with tremor where the impact of engineering solutions on voluntary motion is unreported. This study demonstrates feasibility of the wearable technology as an effective treatment that removes tremor with limited impediment to intentional motion. The goal for such wearable technology is to help individuals with pathological tremor regain independence in activities affected by the tremor condition. Further investigations are needed to validate the technology.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-019-0484-1Pathological tremorOrthosisAssistive robotTremor suppressionControl
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gil Herrnstadt
Martin J. McKeown
Carlo Menon
spellingShingle Gil Herrnstadt
Martin J. McKeown
Carlo Menon
Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Pathological tremor
Orthosis
Assistive robot
Tremor suppression
Control
author_facet Gil Herrnstadt
Martin J. McKeown
Carlo Menon
author_sort Gil Herrnstadt
title Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor
title_short Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor
title_full Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor
title_fullStr Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor
title_full_unstemmed Controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor
title_sort controlling a motorized orthosis to follow elbow volitional movement: tests with individuals with pathological tremor
publisher BMC
series Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
issn 1743-0003
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Background There is a need for alternative treatment options for tremor patients who do not respond well to medications or surgery, either due to side effects or poor efficacy, or that are excluded from surgery. The study aims to evaluate feasibility of a voluntary-driven, speed-controlled tremor rejection approach with individuals with pathological tremor. The suppression approach was investigated using a robotic orthosis for suppression of elbow tremor. Importantly, the study emphasizes the performance in relation to the voluntary motion. Methods Nine participants with either Essential Tremor (ET) or Parkinson’s disease (PD) were recruited and tested off medication. The participants performed computerized pursuit tracking tasks following a sinusoid and a random target, both with and without the suppressive orthosis. The impact of the Tremor Suppression Orthosis (TSO) at the tremor and voluntary frequencies was determined by the relative power change calculated from the Power Spectral Density (PSD). Voluntary motion was, in addition, assessed by position and velocity tracking errors. Results The suppressive orthosis resulted in a 94.4% mean power reduction of the tremor (p < 0.001) – a substantial improvement over reports in the literature. As for the impact to the voluntary motion, paired difference tests revealed no statistical effect of the TSO on the relative power change (p = 0.346) and velocity tracking error (p = 0.283). A marginal effect was observed for the position tracking error (p = 0.05). The interaction torque with the robotic orthosis was small (0.62 Nm) when compared to the maximum voluntary torque that can be exerted by adult individuals at the elbow joint. Conclusions Two key contributions of this work are first, a recently proposed approach is evaluated with individuals with tremor demonstrating high levels of tremor suppression; second, the impact of the approach to the voluntary motion is analyzed comprehensively, showing limited inhibition. This study also seeks to address a gap in studies with individuals with tremor where the impact of engineering solutions on voluntary motion is unreported. This study demonstrates feasibility of the wearable technology as an effective treatment that removes tremor with limited impediment to intentional motion. The goal for such wearable technology is to help individuals with pathological tremor regain independence in activities affected by the tremor condition. Further investigations are needed to validate the technology.
topic Pathological tremor
Orthosis
Assistive robot
Tremor suppression
Control
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-019-0484-1
work_keys_str_mv AT gilherrnstadt controllingamotorizedorthosistofollowelbowvolitionalmovementtestswithindividualswithpathologicaltremor
AT martinjmckeown controllingamotorizedorthosistofollowelbowvolitionalmovementtestswithindividualswithpathologicaltremor
AT carlomenon controllingamotorizedorthosistofollowelbowvolitionalmovementtestswithindividualswithpathologicaltremor
_version_ 1725029794925510656