Outside testing of wearable robots for gait assistance shows a higher metabolic benefit than testing on treadmills
Florian L. Haufe, Eléonore Gascou Duroyon, Peter Wolf, Robert Riener, Michele Xiloyannis
- 发表年份
- 2021
- 引用次数
- 16
- 访问权限
- 开放获取
摘要
Most wearable robots that assist the gait of workers, soldiers, athletes, and hobbyists are developed towards a vision of outdoor, overground walking. However, so far, these devices have predominantly been tested indoors on laboratory treadmills. It is unclear whether treadmill-based laboratory tests are an accurate representation of overground ambulation outdoors with respect to essential outcomes such as the metabolic benefits of robotic assistance. In this study, we investigated the metabolic benefits of the Myosuit, a wearable robot that assists hip and knee extension during the stance phase of gait, for eight unimpaired participants during uphill walking trials in three settings: outside, on a self-paced treadmill with a virtual reality display, and on a standard treadmill at a fixed gait speed. The relative metabolic reduction with Myosuit assistance was most pronounced in the outside setting at - 10.6% and significantly larger than in the two treadmill settings (- 6.9%, p = 0.015 and - 6.2%, p = 0.008). This indicates that treadmill tests likely result in systematically low estimate for the true metabolic benefits of wearable robots during outside, overground walking. Hence, wearable robots should preferably be tested in an outdoor environment to obtain more representative-and ultimately more favorable-results with respect to the metabolic benefit of robotic gait assistance.
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