The Parastep System - Advanced Biometric Research Center :: Home
Transcription
The Parastep System - Advanced Biometric Research Center :: Home
16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System BMSIL, SNU Jong Min, Lee 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Contents 1. Introduction and Background – Historical Background – Brief Review of FES system for Ambulation by Paraplegics. 2. The Parastep System – System’s Electric Charge and Charge Density Parameters – System Parameters and Design 3. Patient Admissibility, Contraindications, and Training – Patient Admissibility – Contraindications – Patient Training 4. Walking performance and Medical and Psychological Benefits Evaluation results – Waling Performance Data – Evaluation Result on Medical Benefits for Walking with the Parastep System – Psychological Outcome Evaluation Results 5. 6. Regulatory status Conclusions 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Commercial FES 개인용FES자극기/근육통완화자극기/저주파자극기 기능적전기자극치료기, FES, Microstim, 마이크로스팀 6,600,000원 163,000원 FES 저주파패치 TENS : transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation 경피 신경 전기 자극 (전류로 피부의 말초 감각 신경을 자극하여 통증을 치료하는 방법) FES : functional electrical stimulation 기능적 전기 자극 (중추신경계 환자에게 사용) 3/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Spinal Cord Injury Cervical - tetraplegia (Quadriplegia) Injuries at the C-1/C-2 levels will often result in loss of breathing, necessitating mechanical ventilators or phrenic nerve pacing. C3 vertebrae and above : Typically results in loss of diaphragm function, necessitating the use of a ventilator for breathing. C4 : Results in significant loss of function at the biceps and shoulders. C5 : Results in potential loss of function at the shoulders and biceps, and complete loss of function at the wrists and hands. C6 : Results in limited wrist control, and complete loss of hand function. C7 and T1 : Results in lack of dexterity in the hands and fingers, but allows for limited use of arms 4/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Spinal Cord Injury Thoracic - paraplegia. T1 to T8 : Results in the inability to control the abdominal muscles. Accordingly, trunk stability is affected. The lower the level of injury, the less severe the effects. T9 to T12 : Results in partial loss of trunk and abdominal muscle control Lumbarsacral The effects of injuries to the lumbar or sacral regions of the spinal cord are decreased control of the legs and hips, urinary system, and anus. cf > Hemiplegia – commonly caused by of brain damage 5/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Upper motor neuron Upper motor neurons motor neurons that originate in the motor region of the cerebral cortex or the brain stem and carry motor information down to the final common pathway, that is, any motor neurons that are not directly responsible for stimulating the target muscle. 6/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Upper motor neuron Upper motor neuron lesion a lesion of the neural pathway above the anterior horn cell or motor nuclei of the cranial nerves. This is in contrast to a lower motor neuron lesion, which affects nerve fibers traveling from the anterior horn of the spinal cord to the relevant muscle(s). 7/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Historical Background Kantrowitz et al. (1960) first application to a paraplegic patient Lieberson et al. (1961) first demonstrated modern application of FNS to hemiplegic patient Kralj et al. (1980) unbraced short-distance ambulation by transcutaneous FNS of a complete paraplegic Graupe et all (1982) first patient-controlled ambulation for a complete paraplegic patient employing EMG Luigi Galvani, 1737-1798 Parastep FNS (1982) manually controlled system Received FDA approval in 1994 8/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Historical Background (cont.) • Neuromuscular stimulation for limb movement – 1961 : 1stFES for paralyzed limb • For foot drop with stimulation over peroneal nerve – 1963 : FES controlled finger extension • Control of grasp in the paralyzed limb – 1960 : Assisted gait in the spinal cord injured • Rising, standing, walking & sitting -> Parastep – 1989 : Hand grasp restoration in cervical SCI • Using contralateral shoulder motion -> Freehand 9/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background DFS : drop foot stimulator (Cf> parastep : both standing and ambulation) The development of FES-based drop foot correction has gone through the following evolutionary stages: Liberson’s DFS arrangement. (Liberson et al. 1961) • hard-wired single-channel surface DFS • hard-wired multichannel surface DFS • hard-wired single-channel implanted DFS • microprocessor-based surface and implanted DFS • artificial and “natural” sensors as replacement for the footswitch • DFS systems incorporating real-time control of FES • completely implanted DFS systems 10/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background DFS : drop foot stimulator MOV 11/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Historical Background(cont.) Sigmedics Inc. (founded for this purpose in 1987) Commercialized Parastep system(Parastep-1 system) Received FDA approval in 1994 Medicare/Medicaid for reimbursement in 2003 About 1000 patients are or have been able to ambulate over short distance . More than 20 hospital in US and Europe. No known detrimental effect. 12/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Brief Review of FES System for Ambulation by Paraplegics • Noninvasive (transcutaneous) FES system – – For both standing and ambulation For Drop foot stimulation (DFS) • Hybrid FES-Long-Leg Brace Ambulation system • Implanted FES Ambulation System 13/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Brief Review of FES System for Ambulation by Paraplegics • Noninvasive (transcutaneous) FES system For both standing and ambulation Ljubljana FES system is unique aside from parastep. -University of Ljubljana, Slovenia But not commercialized and not FDA approved. 1976 2008 The improved six-channel stimulator from the Ljubljana group. (Stanic et al. 1978) 14/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Brief Review of FES System for Ambulation by Paraplegics • Noninvasive (transcutaneous) FES system For Drop foot stimulatoin (DFS) WalkAide received marketing clearance from the FDA!!(sep., 2005) Implanted assembly of the Rancho Los Amigos implanted peroneal stimulator (Waters et al. 1975). 15/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Brief Review of FES System for Ambulation by Paraplegics • Noninvasive (transcutaneous) FES system For Drop foot stimulation (DFS) WalkAide received marketing clearance from the FDA!!(Sep., 2005) MOV MOV 16/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Brief Review of FES System for Ambulation by Paraplegics • Hybrid FES-Long-Leg Brace Ambulation system Since 1970. Use long-leg brace or body brace This system give up one major goal of FES-ambulation : the patient’s independence. Hybrid systems use a body brace or long-leg brace, they are far heavier and far more cumbersome than the 258gram Parastep. Advantages: 1.Partial mechanical support 2.Parallel operation of the biological and mechanical system 3.Sequential operation of the biological and the mechanical system 17/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Introduction and Background Brief Review of FES System for Ambulation by Paraplegics • Implanted FES Ambulation System Implant, showing the epineural electrodes. (Holsheimer et al. 2000) Aalborg University implanted DFS implant and external unit. (Haugland et al. 2000) We note that there are presently some 600 Parastep user, and it is used both at home and at the workspace. In contrast, there are presently only a few(on the order of a dozen) user of even the most advanced percutaneous systems, whereas the fully implanted system in not yet complete, to allow out-of-clinic ambulation 18/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System 19/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System MOV MOV 20/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Motor Prosthesis (MP) • Upper Extremity MPs – Bionic Glove augments grasp using surface electrodes for finger movements – Handmaster System Electrodes mounted in a brace, so easier to use – fingers again – AutoMove surface electrodes but control signals augment muscle movements – Freehand System Implanted system: Stimulator in chest – works with palmar grasp (glass) and lateral grasp (pencil) • Lower Extremity MPs – Mostly for footdrop or standing for paraplegics (limited success with walking) – Odstock, MicroFES & Footlifter use surface electrodes for foot & knee flexion – Parastep System restores standing & walking (about 1,000 recipients) – six electrodes follow pattern of stimulation 21/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System The Parastep® I System $13,000 The Parastep® is a microcomputer controlled functional neuromuscular stimulation (FNS) system that enables independent, unbraced ambulation (i.e., standing and walking) by people with a spinal cord injury. The Parastep® is a non-invasive system and consists of the following components: - a microcomputer controlled neuromuscular stimulation unit - a battery activated power pack with recharger - the Paratester™, a unit for pre-testing main system operation and electrode cables - surface applied skin electrodes - power and electrode cables - a control and stability walker with finger activated control switches. 22/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System The Parastep® I System Tutorial MOV 23/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System ? Cognitive feedback Commands ? CNS PROCESSOR BRAIN VISUAL VESTIBULAR SPINAL NATURAL SENSORS UPPER LIMB SEGMENT DYNAMICS/KINEMATICS MUSCLES Disturbances Spinal Lesion CONTROLLER NATURAL SENSORS ARTIFICIAL SENSORS Desired Task SPINAL CIRCUITS MUSCLES LOWER LIMB SEGMENT DYNAMICS/KINEMATICS Disturbances 24/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System System’s Electric Charge and Charge Density parameter • Parameters of stimulation signal and standard Constraints ANSI(American National Standard Institute) A/s limit : 10mA/s Pulse 120 ~ 150 us duration(width) 20 ~ 25 pps (pulse per second) -> As low as possible while still allowing full contraction for safety. Powered by 9.6 VDC battery maximum current Io= 0.3A Average current Iave = Io x T x f = 0.3 x 24 x 0.00015 = 1.08 mA -> below the ANSI limit 25/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System System’s Electric Charge and Charge Density parameter • Parameters of stimulation signal and standard Constraints ANSI(American National Standard Institute) ‘uC/pulse’ limit : 75uC/pulse Q = Io x T = 0.3 A x 0.00015 s = 45uC -> below the ANSI limit ANSI(American National Standard Institute) ‘uC/mm2’ limit : 10uC/mm2 <Current density> Electrode dimension : S = 4000mm2 Iave/S = 0.00108/4000 = 0.25uC/mm2 -> below the ANSI limit 26/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System System Parameters and Design • Pulse Width and Pulse Repetition Rate (Frequency) 27/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System System Parameters and Design - Stimulation Site Optional for T7 or higher spinal lesion 28/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System System Parameters and Design Sequencing Control Menu for the Stimulation Signal 29/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System The Parastep System System Parameters and Design Above- Lesion EMG-Controlled Menu Selection MOV 30/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Patient Admissibility, Contraindications and Training Patient Admissibility Criteria 31/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Patient Admissibility, Contraindications and Training Patient Admissibility Criteria (cont.) 32/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Patient Admissibility, Contraindications and Training Contraindication Once admission criteria met, no contraindications are known. None are known to have been reported in the literature. (as long as to author) 33/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Walking Performance and Medical and Psychological Benefits Evaluation Result Walking Performance Data 34/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Regulatory Status The Parastep® I System FDA – 1994 The first and still the only FES ambulation system to have received FDA approval. Center for medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) – 2003 Medicare covers around 80% of equipment cost. 35/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Conclusions • • • Discussed the Parastep system The first and still the only, FDA-approved noninvasive FES system For ambulation by complete or near complete thoracic-level paraplegic. • Completion of four months of daily training, ambulation distances for the parstep system were reported to average 444m per walk. • Medical benefits have been documented in terms of – – – – – • greatly increased blood flow to the lower extremities Reduced spasticity Reduced incidence of decubiti Increased thigh circumference Psychological benefits However, even 10yr after FDA and medicare approval, there is great ignorance in the paraplegic community about the availability of such system and of its performance and benefits. 36/37 16. Transcutaneous FES for Ambulation : The Parastep System Conclusions • The Desire to stand upright independently and to ambulate even short distances is the prime desire of paraplegics! • Nether the Parastep nor any other FES approach can be a substitute for spinal cord regeneration because FES does not heal • It is an aid, just like eyeglasses or a hearing aid… • It is hoped that regeneration will become a reality for SCI patients • In the meantime, a realistic aid does exist that is already FDA approved and reimbursable. • It can always be and will be improved, but its performance is usually pretty good!! 37/37 END