HYBRID: Ambulatory Robotic Gait Trainer with Movement Induction and Partial Weight Support.

Journal: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
Published Date:

Abstract

Robotic exoskeletons that induce leg movement have proven effective for lower body rehabilitation, but current solutions offer limited gait patterns, lack stabilization, and do not properly stimulate the proprioceptive and balance systems (since the patient remains in place). Partial body weight support (PBWS) systems unload part of the patient's body weight during rehabilitation, improving the locomotive capabilities and minimizing the muscular effort. HYBRID is a complete system that combines a 6DoF lower body exoskeleton (H1) with a PBWS system (REMOVI) to produce a solution apt for clinical practice that offers improves on existing devices, moves with the patient, offers a gait cycle extracted from the kinematic analysis of healthy users, records the session data, and can easily transfer the patient from a wheelchair to standing position. This system was developed with input from therapists, and its response times have been measured to ensure it works swiftly and without a perceptible delay.

Authors

  • Eloy Urendes
    Department of Information Systems Engineering, University San Pablo CEU, Boadilla del Monte, 28688 Madrid, Spain. eloyjose.urendesjimenez@ceu.es.
  • Guillermo Asín-Prieto
    Neural Rehabilitation Group, Cajal Institute, CSIC-Spanish National Research Council, 28002 Madrid, Spain. guillermo.asin.prieto@csic.es.
  • Ramón Ceres
    Department of Information Systems Engineering, University San Pablo CEU, Boadilla del Monte, 28688 Madrid, Spain. ramon.ceresruiz@colaborador.ceu.es.
  • Rodrigo García-Carmona
    Department of Information Systems Engineering, University San Pablo CEU, Boadilla del Monte, 28688 Madrid, Spain. rodrigo.garciacarmona@ceu.es.
  • Rafael Raya
    Department of Information Systems Engineering, University San Pablo CEU, Boadilla del Monte, 28688 Madrid, Spain. rafael.rayalopez@ceu.es.
  • José L Pons
    Neural Rehabilitation Group, Cajal Institute, CSIC-Spanish National Research Council, 28002 Madrid, Spain. jpons@sralab.org.