TBI Rehabilitation

[BOOK Chapter] The “Arm” Line of Devices for Neurological Rehabilitation: Engineering Book Chapter – Abstract

Abstract

In the modern scenario of neurological rehabilitation, which requires affordable solutions oriented toward promoting home training, the Institute of Industrial Technologies and Automation (ITIA) of the Italian National Research Council (CNR) developed a line of prototypal devices for the rehabilitation of the upper limb, called “Arm.” Arm devices were conceived to promote rehabilitation at affordable prices by capturing all the main features of the state-of-the-art devices. In fact, Arm devices focus on the main features requested by a robot therapist: mechanical adaptation to the patient, ranging from passive motion to high transparency, assist-as-needed and resistive modalities; proper use of sensors for performance monitoring; easy-to-use, modular, and adaptable design. These desirable features are combined with low-cost, additive manufacturing procedures, with the purpose of meeting the requirements coming from research on neuro-motor rehabilitation and motor control and coupling them with the recent breakthrough innovations in design and manufacturing.

Source Title: Handbook of Research on Biomimetics and Biomedical Robotics

Copyright: © 2018 |Pages: 30

DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-2993-4.ch007

 

 

Introduction

 The use of robotic devices for upper-limb neuro-motor rehabilitation is usual practice in clinical centers. In respect to conventional therapies, robots allow to increase training intensity and help patients to promote their active contribution. Furthermore, robots can act as measurers of patients’ performances and adapt their interaction modalities to the emerging needs during the rehabilitation course. Robots like ARMin, MIT Manus, Armeo Spring, Braccio di Ferro, represent the state of the art devices for rehabilitation of the upper-limb and for promoting motor recovery. According to the available assessments and studies in the literature, their efficacy is slightly/moderately higher than the one of conventional therapies. Furthermore, robots are used in research to learn more about physiological and pathological motor control and neuromuscular diseases. Unfortunately, while being the state of the art devices for neuro-motor stimulation and training, such robots are very expensive and not compliant to user-friendly requirements that are needed for semi-autonomous home use. Consequently, they can be used only in clinical environments, under the supervision of medical personnel. Furthermore, sanitary costs related to rehabilitation are increasing and clinical centers can hardly support their burden. The possibility of delocalizing rehabilitation from clinical centers opens the chance for training performed in home environment, with time and costs savings for both the sanitary system and patients. In this scenario, which requires affordable solutions oriented toward promoting home training, the Institute of Industrial Technologies and Automation (ITIA) of the Italian National Research Council (CNR) developed a line of prototypal devices for the rehabilitation of the upper-limb, called -ArmArm devices were conceived to test the possibility of promoting rehabilitation at affordable prices but capturing all the main features of the state of the art devices. In fact, Arm devices focus on the main features requested by a robot therapist: mechanical adaptation to the patient, ranging from passive motion to high transparency, assist-as-needed and resistive modalities; proper use of sensors for performance monitoring; easy-to-use, modular and adaptable design. These desirable features are combined with low-cost, additive manufacturing procedures, with the purpose of meeting the requirements coming from research on neuro-motor rehabilitation and motor control and coupling them with the recent breakthrough innovations in design and manufacturing. Arm devices cover both clinical and home-oriented training and are designed for adaptation to patients with different motor impairment.

The Arm prototypes are:

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