But, researchers from Western University, supported by the Peter C. Maurice Fellowship in Biomedical Engineering, have developed a prototype wearable tremor suppression glove, complete with 3D printed components, that could make life easier for people living with Parkinson’s.
Ana Luisa Trejos, an Electrical and Computer Engineering professor at Western and a key investigator at the university’s Bone and Joint Institute, said, “If you have seen anybody with Parkinson’s that has tremors, they have them in their entire body but it’s the ones in their fingers that really prevent them from performing the activities of daily living.”
Together with the members of her Wearable Biomechatronics Laboratory Group, which focuses on developing the next generation of mechatronic systems for rehabilitation, Trejos has completed studies showing that tremor suppression devices targeting the wrists and elbows often make things even harder for people with Parkinson’s, because the devices can produce exaggerated tremors in the fingers.
But this time, Trejos and her team developed a novel approach for designing wearable technology that actually lets people with Parkinson’s demonstrate better motor control, while at the same time lowering, and even restricting, the involuntary muscle contractions that are so common to the disorder.
“While collecting data, we have seen first-hand that people with Parkinson’s get really frustrated when they can’t do something on their own and I feel our glove will allow them to get back to their daily living. It can be very frustrating to not be able to eat or button a shirt on your own. Or even draw. Things we take for granted,” Trejos said. “By creating a glove that allows people to perform these actions while suppressing the tremors, I think they could go back to being much more independent in their own homes for a far longer period of time.
Most tremor suppression devices focus on doing the obvious – suppressing tremors, like the ones people with Parkinson’s are afflicted with. But the Western research team’s personalized gloves, which have 3D printed components, take a different approach – they are actually able to track voluntary movement. So, if someone with Parkinson’s is attempting to complete a specific task, the gloves actually minimize the tremor, while also allowing the action to take place.
“Our gloves don’t suppress all movements, which is what most other wearable tech systems do. They are either suppressing or not suppressing movement so when a person is trying to perform a specific task, the devices actually prevent them from performing the action they are trying to perform. They have to act against it,” Trejos explained. “Our gloves actually allow the voluntary movement to happen and at the same time, prevent the tremor from occurring.”
The team’s prototype glove was created specifically for the left hand of Yue Zhou, a Western doctoral student from the Wearable Biomechatronics Laboratory Group who also 3D printed the key components of the glove. Michael Naish from Mechanical and Materials Engineering at Western and Mary Jenkins from the university’s Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry were also project collaborators.
In order to maximize the benefits of the team’s new wearable technology, the gloves and their 3D printed components will eventually be custom designed for each of patient’s hands, so they can get through life with Parkinson’s a little more easily.
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[Source/Images: Western University]