Effects of Assisted Dorsiflexion Timing on Voluntary Efforts and Compensatory Movements: A Feasibility Study in Healthy Participants

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Abstract

In previous research, we found that modulating the assistance timing of dorsiflexion may affect a user's voluntary efforts. This could constitute a focus area based on assistive strategies that could be developed to foster patients' voluntary efforts. In this present study, we conducted an experiment to verify the effects of ankle dorsiflexion assistance under different timings using a high-dorsiflexion assistive system. Nine healthy and young participants wore a dorsiflexion-restrictive device that enabled them to use circumduction or steppage gaits. On the basis of the transition from the stance to the swing phase of the gait, the assistance timings of the high-dorsiflexion assistive system were set to have delays, which ranged from 0 to 300 ms. The index results from eight out of nine participants evaluated compensatory movements and revealed positive strong/moderate correlations with assistance delay times (r = 0.627-0.965, p

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Hong, J. C., Cheng, H., Yasuda, K., Ohashi, H., & Iwata, H. (2021). Effects of Assisted Dorsiflexion Timing on Voluntary Efforts and Compensatory Movements: A Feasibility Study in Healthy Participants. IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, 29, 2222–2231. https://doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2021.3119873

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