Integrated Gait Triggered Mixed Reality and Neurophysiological Monitoring as a Framework for Next-Generation Ambulatory Stroke Rehabilitation

Li-Wei Ko*, Cory Stevenson, Wei Chiao Chang, Kuen Han Yu, Kai Chiao Chi, Yi Jen Chen, Chia Hsin Chen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Brain stroke affects millions of people in the world every year, with 50 to 60 percent of stroke survivors suffering from functional disabilities, for which early and sustained post-stroke rehabilitation is highly recommended. However, approximately one third of stroke patients do not receive early in hospital rehabilitation programs due to insufficient medical facilities or lack of motivation. Gait triggered mixed reality (GTMR) is a cognitive-motor dual task with multisensory feedback tailored for lower-limb post-stroke rehabilitation, which we propose as a potential method for addressing these rehabilitation challenges. Simultaneous gait and EEG data from nine stroke patients was recorded and analyzed to assess the applicability of GTMR to different stroke patients, determine any impacts of GTMR on patients, and better understand brain dynamics as stroke patients perform different rehabilitation tasks. Walking cadence improved significantly for stroke patients and lower-limb movement induced alpha band power suppression during GTMR tasks. The brain dynamics and gait performance across different severities of stroke motor deficits was also assessed; the intensity of walking induced event related desynchronization (ERD) was found to be related to motor deficits, as classified by Brunnstrom stage. In particular, stronger lower-limb movement induced ERD during GTMR rehabilitation tasks was found for patients with moderate motor deficits (Brunnstrom stage IV). This investigation demonstrates the efficacy of the GTMR paradigm for enhancing lower-limb rehabilitation, explores the neural activities of cognitive-motor tasks in different stages of stroke, and highlights the potential for joining enhanced rehabilitation and real-time neural monitoring for superior stroke rehabilitation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9605600
Pages (from-to)2435-2444
Number of pages10
JournalIEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering
Volume29
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021

Keywords

  • AR/VR
  • clinical treatment
  • electroencephalogram (EEG)
  • lower-limb stroke rehabilitation
  • mixed reality
  • motor control

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