Abstract

To date, most studies use surface electromyographic (sEMG) signals as the control source on active rehabilitation robots, and unilateral data are collected based on the gait symmetry hypothesis, which has caused much controversy. The purpose of this study is to quantitatively evaluate the sEMG activity asymmetry of bilateral muscles in lower extremities during functional tasks. Nine participants were instructed to perform static and dynamic steady state tests. sEMG signals from the tibialis anterior, soleus, medial gastrocnemius and lateral gastrocnemius muscles of bilateral lower extremities were recorded in the experiments. Muscle activities are quantified in terms of sEMG amplitude. We investigated whether characteristics of left limb and the one of the right limb have the same statistical characteristics during functional tasks using The Wilcoxon rank-sum test, and studied dynamic signal irregularity degree for sEMG activities via sample entropy. The total of muscle activities showed significant differences between left limb and right limb during the static steady state (p = 0.000). For dynamic steady states, there were significant differences for most muscle activities between left limb and right limb at different speeds (p = 0.000). Nevertheless, there was no difference between the lateral gastrocnemius for bilateral limb at 2.0 kilometers per hour (p = 0.060). For medial gastrocnemius, differences were not found between left limb and right limb at 1.0 and 3.0 kilometers per hours (p = 0.390 and p = 0.085, respectively). Similarly, there was no difference for soleus at 3.0 kilometers per hour (p = 0.115). The importance of the differences in muscle activities between left limb and right limb were found. These results can potentially be used for evaluating lower limb extremity function of special populations (elderly people or stroke patients) in an objective and simple method.

Highlights

  • Studies show that the kinesitherapy has an obvious rehabilitation effect for dyskinesia patients

  • During the transition, the activities of medial gastrocnemius (MG) and lateral gastrocnemius (LG) serve for balancing the ground reaction force by generating a certain amount angle of plantar flexion

  • Complexity of tibialis anterior (TA), LG, MG and SOL could indicate the functional difference of the lower extremities

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Summary

Introduction

Studies show that the kinesitherapy has an obvious rehabilitation effect for dyskinesia patients. The training effect is more obvious in patients with a seriously affected gait function whose treatment started earlier. This kind of therapy is based on the plasticity ability of the neural system, i.e., the ability of the brain central nervous system to reorganize itself. Rehabilitation training can help restore functions of a damaged central nervous system (Carr & Shepherd, 1987). As a frontier of rehabilitation engineering, exoskeleton rehabilitation robotics has become one of the hottest research areas. With the development of rehabilitation equipment and bio-sensing technologies, exoskeleton rehabilitation robots have developed from a passive type to an active type. Surface electromyographic (sEMG) has become a popular choice to control prosthesis for its advantages in being non-invasive, relatively portable and simple (Kawamoto et al, 2003)

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