Abstract

BackgroundCerebral Palsy (CP) is the most common cause of permanent serious physical disability in childhood. Although many platforms have been developed, so far there are still not precise guidelines for the rehabilitation of the population with CP. The CPWalker is a robotic platform for the rehabilitation of children with CP, through which they can start experiencing autonomous locomotion in the rehabilitation environment. It allows the possibility of free movement and includes physical and cognitive interfaces into the therapy. The main objective of this work is to evaluate the effects of the CPWalker-based rehabilitation intervention in children with CP by comparing different gait parameters before, during and after the use of the platform.FindingsThe evaluation was divided in three stages where the gait parameters and symmetry indexes of eight subjects with CP were evaluated. In the first stage patients walked only with the help they receive normally in daily life. During the second stage they walked with the CPWalker and finally, in the third stage, they repeated their gait without the platform. In all stages they wore an inertial G-Sensor Ⓡ while walking through the hospital facilities. The results showed statistical significant differences in several spatio-temporal parameters, pelvic angles and general gait cycle parameters, with and without the use of the robotic device. For the eight patients: cadence, speed and stride length presented similar values when comparing before and after the therapy. However, they decreased during the intervention (both means and standard deviations). No significant differences were found in the symmetry indexes with the use of the platform. In spite of this, a reduction in the pelvic angles ranges and propulsion was observed.ConclusionsThe effect of using the device was analyzed for spatio-temporal parameters, pelvic girdle angles and general gait cycle parameters. Among the eighteen initial parameters, seven presented a statistical significant difference when comparing stage 2 of the intervention with stages 1 and 3. Those changes showed the potential of the CPWalker to improve muscular strength and gait patterns of the patients with CP in the long term and to provide useful information for the design of the future generations of rehabilitation robotic devices.

Highlights

  • Cerebral Palsy (CP) is the most common cause of permanent serious physical disability in childhood

  • This paper presents the evaluation of the effects of a robotic-based rehabilitation intervention on the gait parameters of eight patients with CP

  • The Vel_Control signal is the speed proposed by the Laser Range Finder (LRF) after going through the leg kinematic control loop; the Vel_Robot signal corresponds to the speed executed by the CPWalker; and the Filtered Vel_Robot signal is the result of a post-processing filter of the Vel_Robot signal

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Summary

Introduction

Cerebral Palsy (CP) is the most common cause of permanent serious physical disability in childhood. The CPWalker is a robotic platform for the rehabilitation of children with CP, through which they can start experiencing autonomous locomotion in the rehabilitation environment. It allows the possibility of free movement and includes physical and cognitive interfaces into the therapy. CP is often associated with different physical and associative conditions as sensory deficits, cognitive impairments, communication and motor disabilities, behavior issues, seizure disorder, pain and secondary musculoskeletal problems [1]. Several technological advancements have been introduced into the field of rehabilitation to complement conventional therapeutic interventions [3] Among these techniques, robot-assisted gait training or other computer-assisted systems, have been implemented after technological adaptations in the pediatric field [4]. Clinical experience suggests that gait training in children with considerable cognitive deficits could be conducted even more effectively using robot-assisted therapy rather than conventional training [4]

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