Abstract

Walking is one of the most relevant tasks that a person performs in their daily routine. Despite its mechanical complexities, any change in the external conditions that applies some external perturbation, or in the human musculoskeletal system that limits an individual's movement, entails a motor response that can either be compensatory or adaptive in nature. Incidentally, with aging or due to the occurrence of a neuro-musculoskeletal disorder, a combination of such changes including reduced sensory perception, muscle weakness, spasticity, etc. has been reported, and this can significantly degrade the human walking performance. Various studies in gait rehabilitation literature have identified a need for the development of better rehabilitation paradigms and have implied that an efficient human robot interaction is critical. Understanding how humans respond to a particular gait alteration can be beneficial in designing an effective rehabilitation paradigm. In this context, the current work investigates human locomotor adaptation to resistive alteration to the hip and ankle strategies of walking. A cable-driven robotic system, which does not add mobility constraints, was used to implement resistive force interventions within the hip and ankle joints separately through two experiments with eight healthy adult participants in each. In both cases, the intervention was applied during the push-off phase of walking, i.e., from pre-swing to terminal swing. The results showed that subjects in both groups adopted a compensatory response to the applied intervention and demonstrated intralimb and interlimb adaptation. Overall, the participants demonstrated a deviant gait implying lower limb musculoskeletal adjustments as if to compensate for a hip or ankle abnormality.

Highlights

  • A major portion of an individuals daily routine involves activities involving the lower limbs, such as standing, walking, and running (Rose and Gamble, 1994; Rodgers, 1995)

  • The repeated measures ANOVA reported a significant difference in the values of the vertical span, v (p < 1E − 3), horizontal span, h (p < 1E − 3), and the area enclosed within the ankle trajectory, Ar (p < 1E − 3), of the perturbed leg between sessions

  • The Bonferroni post-hoc pairwise analysis reported that these three parameters, v, h, and Ar, decreased significantly during the training session compared to the baseline, BL3-T1, FIGURE 4 | (A) Wearable Adaptive Rehabilitation Suit (WeARS) setup for the hip actuation experiment, Experiment I, with a thigh unit. (B) WeARS setup for the ankle actuation experiment, Experiment II, with a calf unit and shoe with an anchor point to attach the cable

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Summary

Introduction

A major portion of an individuals daily routine involves activities involving the lower limbs, such as standing, walking, and running (Rose and Gamble, 1994; Rodgers, 1995). Body-weight support systems (Duncan et al, 2011; Mao et al, 2015) and robotic leg exoskeletons (Jezernik et al, 2003; Kawamoto et al, 2003; Banala et al, 2007; Veneman et al, 2007; Goffer and Tamari, 2013; Wang et al, 2015; Bionics, 2017) have been developed to design and implement novel external interventions to improve the rehabilitation process The majority of these exoskeletons make use of rigid links as part of their design to support the high joint torque requirements during walking. Some of these systems include C-ALEX (Hidayah et al, 2018), A-TPAD (Vashista et al, 2014), and exosuits (Zhang et al, 2017; Bae et al, 2018; Kim et al, 2018) for lower limbs

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