Robust Control of the Human Trunk Posture Using Functional Neuromuscular Stimulation: A Simulation Study

Author:

Bao Xuefeng1,Audu Musa L.1,Friederich Aidan R.1,Triolo Ronald J.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University , Cleveland, OH 44106

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Advanced Platform Technology Center, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs , Cleveland, OH 44106

Abstract

Abstract The trunk movements of an individual paralyzed by spinal cord injury (SCI) can be restored by functional neuromuscular stimulation (FNS), which applies low-level current to the motor nerves to activate the paralyzed muscles to generate useful torques, to actuate the trunk. FNS can be modulated to vary the biotorques to drive the trunk to follow a user-defined reference motion and maintain it at a desired postural set-point. However, a stabilizing modulation policy (i.e., control law) is difficult to derive as the biomechanics of the spine and pelvis are complex and the neuromuscular dynamics are highly nonlinear, nonautonomous, and input redundant. Therefore, a control method that can stabilize it with FNS without knowing the accurate skeletal and neuromuscular dynamics is desired. To achieve this goal, we propose a control framework consisting of a robust control module that generates stabilizing torques while an artificial neural network-based mapping mechanism with an anatomy-based updating law ensures that the muscle-generated torques converge to the stabilizing values. For the robust control module, two sliding-mode robust controllers (i.e., a high compensation controller and an adaptive controller), were investigated. System stability of the proposed control method was rigorously analyzed based on the assumption that the skeletal dynamics can be approximated by Euler–Lagrange equations with bounded disturbances, which enables the generalization of the control framework. We present experiments in a simulation environment where an anatomically realistic three-dimensional musculoskeletal model of the human trunk moved in the anterior– posterior and medial–lateral directions while perturbations were applied. The satisfactory simulation results suggest the potential of this control technique for trunk tracking tasks in a typical clinical environment.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Small Business Innovation Research

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

Reference46 articles.

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