Wearable Technologies (Jan 2024)

Combining soft robotics and telerehabilitation for improving motor function after stroke

  • Tommaso Proietti,
  • Kristin Nuckols,
  • Jesse Grupper,
  • Diogo Schwerz de Lucena,
  • Bianca Inirio,
  • Kelley Porazinski,
  • Diana Wagner,
  • Tazzy Cole,
  • Christina Glover,
  • Sarah Mendelowitz,
  • Maxwell Herman,
  • Joan Breen,
  • David Lin,
  • Conor Walsh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/wtc.2023.26
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Telerehabilitation and robotics, either traditional rigid or soft, have been extensively studied and used to improve hand functionality after a stroke. However, a limited number of devices combined these two technologies to such a level of maturity that was possible to use them at the patients’ home, unsupervised. Here we present a novel investigation that demonstrates the feasibility of a system that integrates a soft inflatable robotic glove, a cloud-connected software interface, and a telerehabilitation therapy. Ten chronic moderate-to-severe stroke survivors independently used the system at their home for 4 weeks, following a software-led therapy and being in touch with occupational therapists. Data from the therapy, including automatic assessments by the robot, were available to the occupational therapists in real-time, thanks to the cloud-connected capability of the system. The participants used the system intensively (about five times more movements per session than the standard care) for a total of more than 8 hr of therapy on average. We were able to observe improvements in standard clinical metrics (FMA +3.9 ± 4.0, p < .05, COPM-P + 2.5 ± 1.3, p < .05, COPM-S + 2.6 ± 1.9, p < .05, MAL-AOU +6.6 ± 6.5, p < .05) and range of motion (+88%) at the end of the intervention. Despite being small, these improvements sustained at follow-up, 2 weeks after the end of the therapy. These promising results pave the way toward further investigation for the deployment of combined soft robotic/telerehabilitive systems at-home for autonomous usage for stroke rehabilitation.

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