The influence of different Lokomat walking conditions on the energy expenditure of hemiparetic patients and healthy subjects

Abstract To determine the strenuousness and efficacy of therapy, the energy expenditure of 10 healthy and 10 hemiparetic subjects were measured while they walked on a treadmill that was combined with a robot-driven gait orthosis, the Lokomat, which physiologically exercises the legs of a patient on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gait & posture 2007-09, Vol.26 (3), p.372-377
Hauptverfasser: Krewer, Carmen, Müller, Friedemann, Husemann, Britta, Heller, Silke, Quintern, Jochen, Koenig, Eberhard
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract To determine the strenuousness and efficacy of therapy, the energy expenditure of 10 healthy and 10 hemiparetic subjects were measured while they walked on a treadmill that was combined with a robot-driven gait orthosis, the Lokomat, which physiologically exercises the legs of a patient on a moving treadmill. Subjects performed different Lokomat conditions after measurement of the baseline, i.e., standing in the Lokomat with 30% body weight support (BWS). Robotic strategies with a position control scheme used fixed gait patterns to produce the following conditions: walking with 100% BWS at a speed of 1 km/h versus 2 km/h and walking with 30% BWS at a speed of 1 km/h versus 2 km/h. Another robotic control option with a force control scheme allowed the force to be reduced on only one leg of the orthosis. In this option a reduction to 60% and to 0% assistance was tested. Oxygen consumption and heart rate were measured by a breath-by-breath respiratory gas analyzing system using standard open circuit methodology. The results for O2 rate [ml/kg/min] indicate that: (1) walking in the Lokomat is not passive; (2) oxygen uptake is significantly increased due to an effect of loading during active stance phase; (3) speed is not a factor leading to increased oxygen consumption; (4) patients do not significantly increase their oxygen uptake due to the advanced force control scheme.
ISSN:0966-6362
1879-2219
DOI:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2006.10.003