Bidirectional Myoelectric (BIMYO) Soft Robotic Glove Technology For Robot-Assisted Hand Therapy in Stroke Patients
NCT ID: NCT04330417
Last Updated: 2022-03-04
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
6 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-10-13
2021-09-30
Brief Summary
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This proposed research aims to fill the above-mentioned gaps for current hand rehabilitation devices by developing a soft robotic glove that provides compliant assistance to bidirectional hand motion, coupled with intuitive user control.
In the short term, the robotic glove will likely enhance the patients' hand flexion-extension range of motion and improve the neuro-motor control of the hand.
In the long term, the robotic glove will act as an adjunct to therapists, thereby raising productivity in the presence of growing manpower constraints and optimizing therapy time for the patients; this can potentially enhance recovery time and quality of life, as a result of improved hand mobility for common daily tasks.
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Detailed Description
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These bidirectional actuators will be embedded onto each finger segment of a fabric glove, and air inflow into each of the bidirectional actuators can be controlled via a pump-valve control system. The pump-valve control system comprises a microcontroller, onboard power source, transceiver, motor pump, and flexion and extension control valves. Once the microcontroller receives a command signal to adopt a specific hand posture, it will send the postural command to the motor pump and the necessary flexion/extension control valves, thereby actuating the corresponding bidirectional soft actuators to assist the user's hand into the desired hand posture.
Aims:
Aim 1: The bidirectional myoelectric soft robotic glove may provide intuitive user-controlled robot-assisted hand grasping postures to the human user for achieving functional tasks. With the help of the glove system, participants may be more capable of achieving active daily living tasks.
Aim 2: The bidirectional myoelectric soft robotic glove may provide intuitive user-controlled robot-assisted hand grasping postures to the human user for rehabilitation purposes.
Hypothesis:
The central hypothesis is that a bidirectional myoelectric soft robotic glove will provide intuitive user-controlled robot-assisted hand grasping postures to the human user for achieving functional tasks more than no robot assistance.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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EMG Glove Group
A total of 12 sessions of robot-assisted hand training for 6 consecutive weeks.
Robot-Assisted Hand Training
Perform activities of daily living, e.g., write sentences, turn cards, move small and big objects, simulated feeding, stack checkers, pour water, squeeze handles
Control Group
A total of 12 session of standard hand therapy sessions in 6 consecutive weeks.
Standard Hand Therapy
Stretching, Strengthening, Hand Functional Training
Interventions
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Robot-Assisted Hand Training
Perform activities of daily living, e.g., write sentences, turn cards, move small and big objects, simulated feeding, stack checkers, pour water, squeeze handles
Standard Hand Therapy
Stretching, Strengthening, Hand Functional Training
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Stroke type: ischemic or haemorrhagic
3. Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA) of upper extremity impairment of 10-56 out of a maximum score of 66 on the Fugl-Meyer assessment scale
4. Able to comprehend and follow commands
5. Unilateral upper limb impairment
Exclusion Criteria
2. Unstable medical conditions or anticipated life expectancy of \<1 year
3. History of severe depression or active psychiatric disorder
4. Severe spasticity (Modified Ashworth scale \>2)
5. Poor skin condition
30 Years
90 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National University of Singapore
OTHER
National University Hospital, Singapore
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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National University Hospital
Singapore, , Singapore
Countries
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References
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Yap HK, Lim JH, Nasrallah F, Yeow CH. Design and Preliminary Feasibility Study of a Soft Robotic Glove for Hand Function Assistance in Stroke Survivors. Front Neurosci. 2017 Oct 9;11:547. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00547. eCollection 2017.
Koh TH, Cheng N, Yap HK, Yeow CH. Design of a Soft Robotic Elbow Sleeve with Passive and Intent-Controlled Actuation. Front Neurosci. 2017 Oct 25;11:597. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00597. eCollection 2017.
Other Identifiers
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2018/01258
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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