RehabTouch: A mixed-reality gym for rehabilitating the hands, arms, trunk, and legs after stroke
RehabTouch:混合现实健身房,用于中风后手、手臂、躯干和腿的康复
基本信息
- 批准号:9409324
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 77.55万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2017
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2017-09-15 至 2019-05-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:Activities of Daily LivingAdoptedAdoptionBooksCardiopulmonaryChronicClinicalCommunitiesComplexComputer softwareComputersDataDoseEffectivenessEnsureEventExerciseFeedbackGoalsGrantHandHome environmentImpairmentIndividualInterviewLegLibrariesLifeLimb structureLiving StandardsLocationMeasuresMonitorMotivationMovementNervous System TraumaOutcomeOutcome MeasurePainParticipantPathway interactionsPatientsPhasePopulationProcessPublic HealthRandomized Controlled TrialsRehabilitation CentersRehabilitation therapyReportingResearchRotationSafetyShoulderSmall Business Innovation Research GrantSocietiesSpasticSpecific qualifier valueStrokeStructureSystemTechnologyTestingTimeTouch sensationTrainingTranslationsUpper ExtremityWireless TechnologyWorkarmbasecognitive abilityconventional therapycostdisabilityexercise intensityexercise regimenexercise rehabilitationexperiencefitnessfollow-uphapticsimprovedinput devicemotor function improvementmotor impairmentmovement practicepatient home carepost strokeprogramsprototyperehabilitation technologysensorspasticitystandard of carestroke rehabilitationsubluxationtoolvibration
项目摘要
Over 50% of the 700,000 individuals who survive a stroke each year have persistent movement
impairments. Intensive rehabilitation could reduce their impairments, but access to such therapy is
limited. Home therapy could supplement time with a therapist, but the current standard of care is
simply providing individuals printed sheets of exercises, an approach that is not motivating and
often not effective. Technological solutions do exist, but they are either too expensive or are only
intended to treat a small subset of the broad range of movement impairments individuals with
stroke experience, which has limited their wide spread adoption. The goal of this Phase II SBIR is
to develop and test RehabTouch, a mixed-reality gym for motivating and monitoring hand, arm,
trunk, and leg exercises after stroke. RehabTouch is an affordable rehabilitation tool consisting of
two wireless input devices called pucks that each contain an array of sensors. The pucks connect
to a software application that can direct users to perform exercises that are appropriate for their
specific impairments and then detect when repetitions of those exercises are completed. We have
shown that RehabTouch can detect the completion of 40 different exercises, and that individuals
with even severe motor impairment after stroke are able to complete hundreds of repetitions with
RehabTouch and find the system to be motivating, valuable, and easy to use. We thus hypothesize
that home therapy with RehabTouch will be feasible for individuals with a broad range of
impairments, and more motivating and effective than the current standard of practice, printed
sheets of exercises. The aims of this Phase II grant are to: 1) Implement a comprehensive library
of hand, arm, trunk, and leg exercises appropriate for individuals with mild, moderate, and severe
motor impairments by partnering with experienced PTs and OTs; 2) Develop a data-driven exercise
personalization system for RehabTouch that recommends appropriate exercises and intensity
levels for individual users; and 3) Determine the safety and effectiveness of home-based
movement training with RehabTouch for improving motor function in a randomized controlled trial
with individuals with subacute stroke (N = 50). We hypothesize that individuals who exercise with
RehabTouch will exercise for a longer duration, and have significantly greater increases in Fugl-
Meyer score and other impairment- and function-related outcomes than individuals who perform
conventional therapy. We will also analyze the data from this study to determine if RehabTouch is
appropriate for individuals with a broad range of impairments. If successful, this project will result in
a commercially-ready, clinically validated home therapy tool that could become widely adopted in
actual practice, thus reducing long term movement impairments after stroke.
在每年70万中风幸存者中,超过50%的人有持续的运动
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
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Justin Rowe其他文献
Justin Rowe的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Justin Rowe', 18)}}的其他基金
MiGo: wearable sensors that combine actionable data with a behavioral intervention to improve function after stroke
MiGo:可穿戴传感器,将可操作数据与行为干预相结合,以改善中风后的功能
- 批准号:
10255585 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 77.55万 - 项目类别:
MiGo-Wheels: A comprehensive feedback system to help wheelchair users maintain a healthy lifestyle
MiGo-Wheels:帮助轮椅使用者保持健康生活方式的综合反馈系统
- 批准号:
10001364 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 77.55万 - 项目类别:
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