Repeated Robot-Assisted Unilateral Stiffness Perturbations Result in Significant Aftereffects Relevant to Post-Stroke Gait Rehabilitation
Vaughn Chambers, Panagiotis Artemiadis

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel robot-assisted gait intervention using unilateral stiffness perturbations that produce long-lasting aftereffects, potentially improving post-stroke gait rehabilitation by increasing step length and walking speed.
Contribution
The paper presents a new robotic device and protocol that generate significant, long-lasting gait aftereffects, advancing rehabilitation techniques for stroke survivors.
Findings
Unilateral stiffness perturbations increase step lengths bilaterally.
Aftereffects last over 200 gait cycles post-intervention.
Protocol shows promise for improving post-stroke gait deficits.
Abstract
Due to hemiparesis, stroke survivors frequently develop a dysfunctional gait that is often characterized by an overall decrease in walking speed and a unilateral decrease in step length. With millions currently affected by this dysfunctional gait, robust and effective rehabilitation protocols are needed. Although robotic devices have been used in numerous rehabilitation protocols for gait, the lack of significant aftereffects that translate to effective therapy makes their application still questionable. This paper proposes a novel type of robot-assisted intervention that results in significant aftereffects that last much longer than any other previous study. With the utilization of a novel robotic device, the Variable Stiffness Treadmill (VST), the stiffness of the walking surface underneath one leg is decreased for a number of steps. This unilateral stiffness perturbation results in a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProsthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders · Spinal Cord Injury Research
