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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Robot-assisted Therapy in Stroke Rehabilitation.

Won Hyuk Chang, +1 more
- 27 Sep 2013 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 3, pp 174-181
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TLDR
The present evidence supports the use of robot-assisted therapy for improving motor function in stroke patients as an additional therapeutic intervention in combination with the conventional rehabilitation therapies.
Abstract
Research into rehabilitation robotics has grown rapidly and the number of therapeutic rehabilitation robots has expanded dramatically during the last two decades. Robotic rehabilitation therapy can deliver high-dosage and high-intensity training, making it useful for patients with motor disorders caused by stroke or spinal cord disease. Robotic devices used for motor rehabilitation include end-effector and exoskeleton types; herein, we review the clinical use of both types. One application of robot-assisted therapy is improvement of gait function in patients with stroke. Both end-effector and the exoskeleton devices have proven to be effective complements to conventional physiotherapy in patients with subacute stroke, but there is no clear evidence that robotic gait training is superior to conventional physiotherapy in patients with chronic stroke or when delivered alone. In another application, upper limb motor function training in patients recovering from stroke, robot-assisted therapy was comparable or superior to conventional therapy in patients with subacute stroke. With end-effector devices, the intensity of therapy was the most important determinant of upper limb motor recovery. However, there is insufficient evidence for the use of exoskeleton devices for upper limb motor function in patients with stroke. For rehabilitation of hand motor function, either end-effector and exoskeleton devices showed similar or additive effects relative to conventional therapy in patients with chronic stroke. The present evidence supports the use of robot-assisted therapy for improving motor function in stroke patients as an additional therapeutic intervention in combination with the conventional rehabilitation therapies. Nevertheless, there will be substantial opportunities for technical development in near future.

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Exoskeletal Devices for Hand Assistance and Rehabilitation: A Comprehensive Analysis of State-of-the-Art Technologies

TL;DR: A set of classification criteria to help categorize devices and show clear trends, such as preferring underactuated devices, electrical transducers with flexible transmission or the more recent uptake of soft technologies is presented.
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Robot-assisted upper extremity rehabilitation for cervical spinal cord injuries: a systematic scoping review

TL;DR: Preliminary evidence suggests robot-assisted interventions are safe, feasible and can reduce active assistance provided by therapists, and Implications for rehabilitation Robot-assisted upper extremity training for individuals with cervical spinal cord injury is safe, practicable and can reduced hands-on assistance given by therapists.
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Low-Profile Two-Degree-of-Freedom Wrist Exoskeleton Device Using Multiple Spring Blades

TL;DR: The technical verification of the exoskeleton revealed the feasibility of generating forces that can generate wrist flexion/extension and adduction/abduction movements.
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Impedance Control for Robotic Rehabilitation: A Robust Markovian Approach.

TL;DR: A unified model of the human-robot system that considers the ankle impedance by a second-order dynamics subject to uncertainties in the stiffness, damping, and inertia parameters has been developed and a control approach that improves the force control robustness is proposed.
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Haptics-enabled Interactive NeuroRehabilitation Mechatronics: Classification, Functionality, Challenges and Ongoing Research

TL;DR: Different classes of NRM technology are introduced and a view of the existing technical, technological and control challenges of the current state of this technology is provided together with the ongoing lines of research.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stroke Care 2: Stroke rehabilitation

TL;DR: There is evidence to support rehabilitation in well coordinated multidisciplinary stroke units or through provision of early supported provision of discharge teams and promising interventions that could be beneficial to improve aspects of gait include fitness training, high-intensity therapy, and repetitive-task training.
Journal ArticleDOI

Robot-assisted movement training compared with conventional therapy techniques for the rehabilitation of upper-limb motor function after stroke.

TL;DR: Compared with conventional treatment, robot-assisted movements had advantages in terms of clinical and biomechanical measures and was justified into the use of robotic manipulation for motor rehabilitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intensity of leg and arm training after primary middle-cerebral-artery stroke: a randomised trial

TL;DR: Greater intensity of leg rehabilitation improves functional recovery and health-related functional status, whereas greater intensity of arm rehabilitation results in small improvements in dexterity, providing further evidence that exercise therapy primarily induces treatment effects on the abilities at which training is specifically aimed.
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