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SURGICAL

Voluntary phantom hand and finger movements in transhumerai amputees could be used to naturally control polydigital prostheses

Nathanaël Jarrassé, Caroline Nicol, Florian Richer, Amélie Touillet, N. Martinet, Jean Paysant, Jozina B. De Graaf

Year
2017
Citations
9

Abstract

An arm amputation is extremely invalidating since many of our daily tasks require bi-manual and precise control of hand movements. Perfect hand prostheses should therefore offer a natural, intuitive and cognitively simple control over their numerous biomimetic active degrees of freedom. While efficient polydigital prostheses are commercially available, their control remains complex to master and offers limited possibilities, especially for high amputation levels. In this pilot study, we demonstrate the possibility for upper-arm amputees to intuitively control a polydigital hand prosthesis by using surface myoelectric activities of residual limb muscles (sEMG) associated with phantom limb movements, even if these residual arm muscles on which the phantom activity is measured were not naturally associated with hand movements before amputation. Using pattern recognition methods, three arm amputees were able, without training, to initiate 5-8 movements of a robotic hand (including individual finger movements) by simply mobilizing their phantom limb while the robotic hand was mimicking the action in real time. This innovative control approach could offer to numerous upper-limb amputees an access to recent biomimetic prostheses with multiple controllable joints, without requiring surgery or complex training; and might deeply change the way the phantom limb is apprehended by both patients and clinicians.

Keywords

Phantom limbAmputationImaging phantomProsthesisArtificial limbsPhysical medicine and rehabilitationComputer scienceRobotic handProsthetic handUpper limb

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