IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering (Jan 2022)

Soft Exoskeleton Mimics Human Cough for Assisting the Expectoration Capability of SCI Patients

  • Yan Zhang,
  • Ziqi Wang,
  • Qinggang Ge,
  • Zongyu Wang,
  • Xiangjie Zhou,
  • Shaohang Han,
  • Weidong Guo,
  • Yuru Zhang,
  • Dangxiao Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3162578
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30
pp. 936 – 946

Abstract

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This paper describes the design of a bionic soft exoskeleton and demonstrates its feasibility for assisting the expectoration function rehabilitation of patients with spinal cord injury (SCI). Methods: A human–robot coupling respiratory mechanic model is established to mimic human cough, and a synergic inspire–expire assistance strategy is proposed to maximize the peak expiratory flow (PEF), the key metric for promoting cough intensity. The negative pressure module of the exoskeleton is a soft “iron lung” using layer-jamming actuation. It assists inspiration by increasing insufflation to mimic diaphragm and intercostal muscle contraction. The positive pressure module exploits soft origami actuators for assistive expiration; it pressures human abdomen and bionically “pushes” the diaphragm upward. Results: The maximum increase in PEF ratios for mannequins, healthy participants, and patients with SCI with robotic assistance were 57.67%, 278.10%, and 124.47%, respectively. The soft exoskeleton assisted one tetraplegic SCI patient to cough up phlegm successfully. Conclusion: The experimental results suggest that the proposed soft exoskeleton is promising for assisting the expectoration ability of SCI patients in everyday life scenarios. Significance: The proposed soft exoskeleton is promising for advancing the application field of rehabilitation exoskeletons from motor functions to respiratory functions.

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