Exoskeletal meal assistance system (EMAS II) for progressive muscle dystrophy patient

This paper introduces a 4-DOFs exoskeletal meal assistance system (EMAS II) for progressive muscle dystrophy patient. It is generally better for the patient to use his/her hands by himself in daily life because active works maintain level of residual functions, health and initiative of him/her. The EMAS II that has a new joystick-type user interface device and three-DOFs on a shoulder part is enhanced for an easier operation and more comfortable support on eating, as the succeeding model of the previous system that has two-DOFs on a shoulder. In order to control the 4-DOFs system by the simple user interface device, the EMAS II simulates upper limb motion patterns of a healthy person. The motion patterns are modeled by extracting correlations between the height of a user's wrist joint and that of the user's elbow joint at the table. Moreover, the EMAS II automatically brings user's hand up to his/her mouth or back to a table when he/she pushes a preset switch on the interface device. Therefore a user has only to control a position of his/her wrist to pick or scoop foods and then flip the switch to start automatic mode, while a height of the elbow joint is automatically controlled by the EMAS II itself. The results of experiments, where a healthy subject regarded as a muscle dystrophy patient eats a meal with EMAS II, show that the subject finished her meal in a natural way in 18 minutes 40 seconds which was within a recommended time of 30 minutes.

[1]  Yasuhisa Hasegawa,et al.  Exoskeletal meal assistance system (EMAS II) for patients with progressive muscular disease , 2013, Adv. Robotics.

[3]  J.C. Perry,et al.  Upper-Limb Powered Exoskeleton Design , 2007, IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics.

[4]  Just L Herder,et al.  Principle and design of a mobile arm support for people with muscular weakness. , 2006, Journal of rehabilitation research and development.

[5]  ChangHwan Kim,et al.  Human-like Arm Motion Generation for Humanoid Robots Using Motion Capture Database , 2006, 2006 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems.

[6]  Ryoji Soyama,et al.  Selectable operating interfaces of the meal-assistance device My Spoon , 2004 .

[7]  J.L. Herder Development of a statically balanced arm support: ARMON , 2005, 9th International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics, 2005. ICORR 2005..

[8]  J. P. Friconneau,et al.  ABLE, an innovative transparent exoskeleton for the upper-limb , 2008, 2008 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems.

[9]  Hidetoshi Suzuki,et al.  Development of a Muscle Suit for the Upper Limb - Proposal of Posture Control Methods , 2006, 2006 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems.

[10]  D.J. Reinkensmeyer,et al.  Biomimetic orthosis for the neurorehabilitation of the elbow and shoulder (BONES) , 2008, 2008 2nd IEEE RAS & EMBS International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics.