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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Pons Jose L.) srt2:(2020-2022)"

Sökning: WFRF:(Pons Jose L.) > (2020-2022)

  • Resultat 1-4 av 4
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1.
  • Jung, Moon Ki, et al. (författare)
  • Intramuscular EMG-driven Musculoskeletal Modelling: Towards Implanted Muscle Interfacing in Spinal Cord Injury Patients
  • 2022
  • Ingår i: IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering. - 0018-9294 .- 1558-2531. ; 69:1, s. 63-74
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Objective: Surface EMG-driven modelling has been proposed as a means to control assistive devices by estimating joint torques. Implanted EMG sensors have several advantages over wearable sensors but provide a more localized information on muscle activity, which may impact torque estimates. Here, we tested and compared the use of surface and intramuscular EMG measurements for the estimation of required assistive joint torques using EMG driven modelling. Methods: Four healthy subjects and three incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI) patients performed walking trials at varying speeds. Motion capture marker trajectories, surface and intramuscular EMG, and ground reaction forces were measured concurrently. Subject-specific musculoskeletal models were developed for all subjects, and inverse dynamics analysis was performed for all individual trials. EMG-driven modelling based joint torque estimates were obtained from surface and intramuscular EMG. Results: The correlation between the experimental and predicted joint torques was similar when using intramuscular or surface EMG as input to the EMG-driven modelling estimator in both healthy individuals and patients. Conclusion: We have provided the first comparison of non-invasive and implanted EMG sensors as input signals for torque estimates in healthy individuals and SCI patients. Significance: Implanted EMG sensors have the potential to be used as a reliable input for assistive exoskeleton joint torque actuation.
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2.
  • Pascual-Valdunciel, Alejandro, et al. (författare)
  • Intramuscular Stimulation of Muscle Afferents Attains Prolonged Tremor Reduction in Essential Tremor Patients
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering. - 0018-9294 .- 1558-2531. ; 68:6, s. 1768-1776
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This study proposes and clinically tests intramuscular electrical stimulation below motor threshold to achieve prolonged reduction of wrist flexion/extension tremor in Essential Tremor (ET) patients. The developed system consisted of an intramuscular thin-film electrode structure that included both stimulation and electromyography (EMG) recording electrodes, and a control algorithm for the timing of intramuscular stimulation based on EMG (closed-loop stimulation). Data were recorded from nine ET patients with wrist flexion/extension tremor recruited from the Gregorio Marañón Hospital (Madrid, Spain). Patients participated in two experimental sessions comprising: 1) sensory stimulation of wrist flexors/extensors via thin-film multichannel intramuscular electrodes; and 2) surface stimulation of the nerves innervating the same target muscles. For each session, four of these patients underwent random 60-s trials of two stimulation strategies for each target muscle: 1) selective and adaptive timely stimulation (SATS) - based on EMG of the antagonist muscle; and 2) continuous stimulation (CON) of target muscles. Two patients underwent SATS stimulation trials alone while the other three underwent CON stimulation trials alone in each session. Kinematics of wrist, elbow, and shoulder, together with clinical scales, were used to assess tremor before, right after, and 24 h after each session. Intramuscular SATS achieved, on average, 32% acute (during stimulation) tremor reduction on each trial, while continuous stimulation augmented tremorgenic activity. Furthermore, tremor reduction was significantly higher using intramuscular than surface stimulation. Prolonged reduction of tremor amplitude (24 h after the experiment) was observed in four patients. These results showed acute and prolonged (24 h) tremor reduction using a minimally invasive neurostimulation technology based on SATS of primary sensory afferents of wrist muscles. This strategy might open the possibility of an alternative therapeutic approach for ET patients.
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3.
  • Puttaraksa, Gonthicha, et al. (författare)
  • Online tracking of the phase difference between neural drives to antagonist muscle pairs in essential tremor patients
  • 2022
  • Ingår i: IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering. - 1558-0210 .- 1534-4320. ; 30, s. 709-718
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Transcutaneous electrical stimulation has been applied in tremor suppression applications. Out-of-phase stimulation strategies applied above or below motor threshold result in a significant attenuation of pathological tremor. For stimulation to be properly timed, the varying phase relationship between agonist-antagonist muscle activity during tremor needs to be accurately estimated in real-time. Here we propose an online tremor phase and frequency tracking technique for the customized control of electrical stimulation, based on a phase-locked loop (PLL) system applied to the estimated neural drive to muscles. Surface electromyography signals were recorded from the wrist extensor and flexor muscle groups of 13 essential tremor patients during postural tremor. The EMG signals were pre-processed and decomposed online and offline via the convolution kernel compensation algorithm to discriminate motor unit spike trains. The summation of motor unit spike trains detected for each muscle was bandpass filtered between 3 to 10 Hz to isolate the tremor related components of the neural drive to muscles. The estimated tremorogenic neural drive was used as input to a PLL that tracked the phase differences between the two muscle groups. The online estimated phase difference was compared with the phase calculated offline using a Hilbert Transform as a ground truth. The results showed a rate of agreement of 0.88 ± 0.22 between offline and online EMG decomposition. The PLL tracked the phase difference of tremor signals in real-time with an average correlation of 0.86 ± 0.16 with the ground truth (average error of 6.40° ± 3.49°). Finally, the online decomposition and phase estimation components were integrated with an electrical stimulator and applied in closed-loop on one patient, to representatively demonstrate the working principle of the full tremor suppression system. The results of this study support the feasibility of real-time estimation of the phase of tremorogenic neural drive to muscles, providing a methodology for future tremor-suppression neuroprostheses.
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4.
  • Rodrigues, Camila, et al. (författare)
  • Comparison of Intramuscular and Surface Electromyography Recordings towards the Control of Wearable Robots for Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation
  • 2020
  • Ingår i: Proceedings of the IEEE RAS and EMBS International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics. - 2155-1774. ; 2020-November, s. 564-569
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) affects thousands of people worldwide every year. SCI patients have disrupted muscle recruitment and are more predisposed to other complications. To recover or enhance lower limbs functions, conventional rehabilitation programs are typically used. More recently, conventional programs have been combined with robot-assisted training. Electromyography (EMG) activity is generally used to record the electrical activity of the muscles, which in turn can be used to control robotic assistive devices as orthoses, prostheses and exoskeletons. In this sense, surface EMG can be used as input to myoelectric control but presents some limitations such as myoelectric crosstalk, as well as the influence of motion artefacts, and electromagnetic noise. EMG can also be recorded using intramuscular detection systems, which allows the detection of electric potentials closer to the muscle fibres and the recording of EMG activity from deeper muscles. This paper evaluates the quality of intramuscular EMG recordings compared to surface EMG signals, as a preliminary step to control EMG-driven exoskeletons. Seven healthy subjects performed submaximal knee and ankle flexion/extension movements with and without the use of a lower limb exoskeleton. Intramuscular recordings presented early muscle activation detecting times, which is a very important feature in real-time control, and good signal-to-noise ratio values, showing the potential of these biosignals as reliable input measures to control exoskeletons for rehabilitation purposes.
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