Publication | Open Access
Demonstration of Kinematic-Based Closed-loop Deep Brain Stimulation for Mitigating Freezing of Gait in People with Parkinson’s Disease
23
Citations
8
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
Gait AnalysisWearable TechnologyMotor ControlGait EpisodesMovement AnalysisRehabilitation RoboticsStimulation DeviceKinesiologyParkinson ’Impaired GaitMotor NeuroscienceKinematicsNeurorehabilitationHealth SciencesMotion SynthesisRehabilitationNeurostimulationBrain StimulationMovement DisordersNovel Control PolicyPathological GaitNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemHuman MovementMedicine
Impaired gait in Parkinson's disease is marked by slow, arrhythmic stepping, and often includes freezing of gait episodes where alternating stepping halts completely. Wearable inertial sensors offer a way to detect these gait changes and novel deep brain stimulation (DBS) systems can respond with clinical therapy in a real-time, closed-loop fashion. In this paper, we present two novel closed-loop DBS algorithms, one using gait arrhythmicity and one using a logistic-regression model of freezing of gait detection as control signals. Benchtop validation results demonstrate the feasibility of running these algorithms in conjunction with a closed-loop DBS system by responding to real-time human subject kinematic data and pre-recorded data from leg-worn inertial sensors from a participant with Parkinson's disease. We also present a novel control policy algorithm that changes neurostimulator frequency in response to the kinematic inputs. These results provide a foundation for further development, iteration, and testing in a clinical trial for the first closed-loop DBS algorithms using kinematic signals to therapeutically improve and understand the pathophysiological mechanisms of gait impairment in Parkinson's disease.
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