Content » Vol 50, Issue 7

Original report

Feasibility of a wearable soft-robotic glove to support impaired hand function in stroke patients

Bob Radder, Gerdienke Prange-Lasonder, Anke I. R. Kottink, Alejandro Melendez-Calderon, Jaap H. Buurke, Johan S. Rietman
Roessingh Research and Development, University of Twente, 7500AH Enschede, The Netherlands. E-mail: b.radder@rrd.nl
DOI: 10.2340/16501977-2357

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the feasibility of a wear-able, soft-robotic glove system developed to combine assistive support in daily life with performing therapeutic exercises on a computer at home (the HandinMind system).
Design: Feasibility study.
Patients: Five chronic stroke patients with limitations in activities of daily living due to impaired hand function.
Methods: Participants performed a usability test and several functional tasks with the HandinMind system across 2 sessions. Feasibility was measured using the System Usability Scale (SUS), Intrinsic Motivation Inventory (IMI) and performance times of the functional tasks.
Results: User acceptance measured by the SUS and IMI was scored high. The median SUS scores of sessions 1 and 2 were 80. 0 (interquartile range (IQR) 70. 0–88. 8) and 77. 5 (IQR 75. 0–87. 5), respectively, and the median IMI score was 6. 3 points out of 7 points (IQR 6. 2–6. 3). Functional task performance was initially slower with the HandinMind glove compared with performance without the glove, but improved up to the level of performance without the glove across no more than 3 repetitions.
Conclusion: Chronic stroke patients with impaired hand function were positive about the feasibility of the first prototype of the HandinMind system. How-ever, performance and ease of use of the system should be improved further in future development phases.

Lay Abstract

This study investigated the feasibility of a first prototype of a wearable, soft-robotic glove system (HandinMind) developed to combine assistive support in daily life with performing therapeutic exercises on a computer at home. This system was tested by 5 chronic stroke patients with limitations in activities of daily living due to impaired hand function. Although the subjects identified several usability issues, they showed high scores on usability for this first prototype of the HandinMind system. Furthermore, they initially performed functional tasks slower with the HandinMind glove compared with without the glove, but performance improved up to the level of performance without the glove across no more than 3 repetitions. With further improvements, this system may enable intensive functional hand training for stroke patients without the need for supervision by a therapist.

Comments

Do you want to comment on this paper? The comments will show up here and if appropriate the comments will also separately be forwarded to the authors. You need to login/create an account to comment on articles. Click here to login/create an account.