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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03924765
Other study ID # H19179
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date July 24, 2019
Est. completion date November 19, 2020

Study information

Verified date October 2021
Source Georgia Institute of Technology
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The increased metabolic and biomechanical demands of ambulation limit community mobility in persons with lower limb disability due to neurological damage. There is a critical need for improving the locomotion capabilities of individuals with stroke to increase their community mobility, independence, and health. Robotic exoskeletons have the potential to assist these individuals by increasing community mobility to improve quality of life. While these devices have incredible potential, current technology does not support dynamic movements common with locomotion such as transitioning between different gaits and supporting a wide variety of walking speeds. One significant challenge in achieving community ambulation with exoskeletons is providing an adaptive control system to accomplish a wide variety of locomotor tasks. Many exoskeletons today are developed without a detailed understanding of the effect of the device on the human musculoskeletal system. This research is interested in studying the question of how the control system affects stroke biomechanics including kinematic, kinetics and muscle activation patterns. By optimizing exoskeleton controllers based on human biomechanics and adapting control based on task, the biggest benefit to patient populations will be achieved to help advance the state-of-the-art with assistive hip exoskeletons.


Description:

One significant challenge in achieving community ambulation with exoskeletons is providing an adaptive control system to accomplish a wide variety of locomotor tasks. Many exoskeletons today are developed without a detailed understanding of the effect of the device on the human musculoskeletal system. The study is interested in exploring the question of how the control system affects human biomechanics including kinematic, kinetics and muscle activation patterns. By optimizing exoskeleton controllers based on human biomechanics and adapting control based on task, this work will be able to provide the biggest benefit to patients and advance the state-of-the-art with assistive hip exoskeletons. A large patient population that could benefit from lower limb assistive technology are stroke survivors, which is the specific population this proposal targets. One common characteristic of stroke survivors who regain their ability to walk is that the hip muscles are overtaxed due to distal weakness. The investigators propose to use a powered hip exoskeleton to augment their proximal musculature, which needs to produce significant power output in most locomotion activities such as standing up, walking, and going up stairs or slopes. Another biomechanical aspect of stroke survivors is an asymmetric gait in terms of kinematics, kinetics and muscle activations. The research will examine what kind of exoskeleton assistance is most beneficial to stroke survivors for enhancing community ambulation. The hypothesis is that since the gait is asymmetric, the controller will need to be asymmetric to provide optimal assistance to aid in mobility. The long-term research goal is to create powered assistive exoskeletons devices that are of great value to individuals with serious lower limb disabilities by improving clinical outcomes such as walking speed and community ambulation ability. The overall objective of the proposed project is to study the biomechanical effects of using a hip exoskeleton with adaptive controllers for assisting stroke survivors with lower limb deficits to improve their community ambulation capabilities. The central hypothesis overarching both aims is that exoskeleton control that adapts to environmental terrain will improve mobility metrics for human exoskeleton users on community ambulation tasks. The rationale is that since human biomechanics change based on task, exoskeleton controllers likewise need to optimize their assistance levels to match what the human is doing. The team has previously designed and extensively tested an autonomous hip exoskeleton in able-bodied subjects on a treadmill and plan to follow this up with a separate study on able bodied subjects during overground locomotion of walking, stairs, and ramps. The aim of this study is to translate an autonomous robotic hip exoskeleton to provide adaptive assistance in community ambulation for stroke survivors with mobility impairment. The team will analyze the biomechanical effects and clinical benefits with using an autonomous hip exoskeleton for a walking impaired user (due to stroke). The primary hypothesis for this aim is that stroke survivors will increase their mobility in community ambulation tasks using the adaptive control framework. A sub-hypothesis is that stroke survivors who present with unilateral impairment will have superior biomechanical and clinical outcomes using a controller with asymmetric assistance. The investigators expect a controller that provides a greater assistance to the impaired side to improve overall symmetry and help the stroke survivor maintain a more efficient gait pattern to help improve walking speed (primary outcome measure). The expected outcome of these aims will be an increased understanding of the biomechanical and clinical effects in applying hip assistance with a robotic exoskeleton in community ambulation tasks such as overground walking, ramps and stairs. This work will serve as a foundational start for a broader planned study of optimizing controllers to improve biomechanics in the walking impaired using powered hip autonomous exoskeletons. This aim will have a positive impact by helping to inform the design and control of future exoskeleton for assisting individuals with lower limb disabilities, with specific insight in stroke survivors with mobility impairment.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 10
Est. completion date November 19, 2020
Est. primary completion date November 19, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 85 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Age: 18-85 years - Had stroke over 6 months prior - Greater than 17 on minimental state examination (MMSE) - Sit unsupported for a minimum of 30 seconds - Follow a 3 step command. - Ability to walk without support (a rail as needed is allowed), with a walking speed of at least 0.4 m/s (limited community ambulatory speed) - Ability to walk for at least 6 minutes - Willingness and ability to participate over a 1-4 hour experiment, with breaks enforced regularly and as needed - Ability to transfer (sit-to-stand and stand-to-sit) with no external support (arm rests support allowed) - Ability to ambulate over small slopes (3 degrees) and a few steps (6 steps) Exclusion Criteria: - Loss of sensation in the legs - A complete spinal cord injury - History of concussion in the last 6 months - History of any severe cardiovascular conditions - Severe arthritis - Orthopedic problems that limit lower extremity passive range of motion (knee flexion contracture of >10 degrees, knee flexion active ROM 15 degrees) - Pre-existing neurological and other disorders such as Parkinson's disease, ALS, MS, dementia - History of head trauma - Lower extremity amputation - Non-healing ulcers of a lower extremity - Renal dialysis or end state liver disease - Legal blindness or severe visual impairment - Uses a pacemaker - Has a metal implants in the head region - Uses medications that lower seizure thresholds. - Lastly, if the subject is participating in another clinical trial and/or subject's condition relating to criteria that, in the opinion of the Principal Investigator (PI), would likely affect the study outcome or confound the results, subject will be excluded from the study.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
Powered hip exoskeleton
The study team will be testing a powered hip exoskeleton and its capability to improve locomotion in stroke survivors.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Exoskeleton and Prosthetic Intelligent Controls Lab Atlanta Georgia

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Georgia Institute of Technology

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Overground Self-Selected Walking Speed Using Hip Exoskeleton Assistance Using five different hip exoskeleton assistance strategies, the participant's overground self-selected walking speed was recorded. Assistance types are 1) Unilateral Paretic Assistance, 2) Unilateral Non-Paretic Assistance, 3) Bilateral Equal Assistance, 4) Bilateral Additional Paretic Assistance, and 5) Bilateral Additional Non-Paretic Assistance. The first information (unilateral or bilateral) refers to the leg(s) that the exoskeleton is providing assistance with. For example, unilateral assistance means that the assistance is provided to only one side (zero assistance for the other side). The second information (additional paretic/non-paretic or equal) refers to the leg that the assistance is provided more. For example, bilateral additional paretic assistance means that the exoskeleton is providing assistance to both hip joints but provides higher magnitude on the paretic side. 4 hours
Secondary Step Length Asymmetry Using Hip Exoskeleton Assistance Step length asymmetry was calculated by dividing the paretic side step length by the sum of the paretic and non-paretic side step lengths, where an asymmetry of 0.5 indicates perfect symmetry between the paretic and non-paretic sides. Using five different hip exoskeleton assistance strategies, the participant's Step Length Asymmetry during overground walking was recorded. Assistance types are 1) Unilateral Paretic Assistance, 2) Unilateral Non-Paretic Assistance, 3) Bilateral Equal Assistance, 4) Bilateral Additional Paretic Assistance, and 5) Bilateral Additional Non-Paretic Assistance. The first information (unilateral or bilateral) refers to the leg(s) that the exoskeleton is providing assistance with. For example, unilateral assistance means that the assistance is provided to only one side (zero assistance for the other side). The second information (additional paretic/non-paretic or equal) refers to the leg that the assistance is provided more. 4 hours
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