Abstract

Loss of hand use is considered by many spinal cord injury survivors to be the most devastating consequence of their injury. Functional electrical stimulation (FES) of forearm and hand muscles has been used to provide basic, voluntary hand grasp to hundreds of human patients. Current approaches typically grade pre-programmed patterns of muscle activation using simple control signals, such as those derived from residual movement or muscle activity. However, the use of such fixed stimulation patterns limits hand function to the few tasks programmed into the controller. In contrast, we are developing a system that uses neural signals recorded from a multi-electrode array implanted in the motor cortex; this system has the potential to provide independent control of multiple muscles over a broad range of functional tasks. Two monkeys were able to use this cortically controlled FES system to control the contraction of four forearm muscles despite temporary limb paralysis. The amount of wrist force the monkeys were able to produce in a one-dimensional force tracking task was significantly increased. Furthermore, the monkeys were able to control the magnitude and time course of the force with sufficient accuracy to track visually displayed force targets at speeds reduced by only one-third to one-half of normal. Although these results were achieved by controlling only four muscles, there is no fundamental reason why the same methods could not be scaled up to control a larger number of muscles. We believe these results provide an important proof of concept that brain-controlled FES prostheses could ultimately be of great benefit to paralyzed patients with injuries in the mid-cervical spinal cord.

Highlights

  • Many spinal cord injury survivors report that recovery of hand use would be the most desirable function to regain [1]

  • A number of groups have shown that multi-electrode recordings from the primary motor cortex (M1) can be used to predict kinematic features of desired movement [9,10,11,12] and that these signals can be used for real-time control of movement kinematics [13,14,15,16,17,18,19]

  • We anticipate that the approach could offer significant advantages to paralyzed patients with injuries in the mid-cervical spinal cord, and potentially even greater benefits to patients with high-cervical injuries resulting in paralysis of the entire upper limb

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Summary

Introduction

Many spinal cord injury survivors report that recovery of hand use would be the most desirable function to regain [1] To this end, functional electrical stimulation (FES) has been used to restore limited, but functionally important grasping to several hundred human spinal cord injured patients [2,3,4]. We report an important proof of concept experiment using real-time EMG predictions to control electrical stimulation of several forearm muscles of monkey subjects. This brain-controlled FES restored limited, voluntary movement during temporarily paralysis of the arm. We anticipate that the approach could offer significant advantages to paralyzed patients with injuries in the mid-cervical spinal cord, and potentially even greater benefits to patients with high-cervical injuries resulting in paralysis of the entire upper limb

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