Abstract

Many people have problems with elbow joint driving because of different diseases, sport trauma, road traffic injuries, etc. A good way for restoring elbow motions is a self-rehabilitation using an active orthosis. It has to be light, convenient for daily use, active, easy to control by patients, and safe. The paper presents a prototype of an active elbow orthosis. The plastic details were designed using a CAD system and were 3D printed. The joint was driven by a Dynamixel actuator. To increase the joint moment, a reduction gear-belt drive was constructed and applied. Experiments with six healthy subjects were performed using a Noraxon measuring system, aiming to investigate elbow joint angles in natural movements with four different velocities of elbow flexion and extension without and with a load of 0.5 kg in the hand. The four velocities (from very slow to very fast) were controlled by a specialized PC application. In order to achieve similar motions of the orthosis, the angle profiles were approximated so that the motion was between 10° and 120° because of electro/mechanical and software safety stoppers. Experiments were performed with the orthosis following the given angle profile without load and with a load of 0.5 kg. The results show that the orthosis’ forearm performs the given angle and angular speed profiles with enough precision.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call