Extra-neural signals from severed nerves enable intrinsic hand movements in transhumeral amputations
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2022

Robotic prostheses controlled by myoelectric signals can restore limited but important hand function in individuals with upper limb amputation. The lack of individual finger control highlights the yet insurmountable gap to fully replacing a biological hand. Implanted electrodes around severed nerves have been used to elicit sensations perceived as arising from the missing limb, but using such extra-neural electrodes to record motor signals that allow for the decoding of phantom movements has remained elusive. Here, we showed the feasibility of using signals from non-penetrating neural electrodes to decode intrinsic hand and finger movements in individuals with above-elbow amputations. We found that information recorded with extra-neural electrodes alone was enough to decode phantom hand and individual finger movements, and as expected, the addition of myoelectric signals reduced classification errors both in offline and in real-time decoding.

Författare

Bahareh Ahkami

Chalmers, Elektroteknik, System- och reglerteknik

Center for Bionics and Pain Research

Enzo Mastinu

Center for Bionics and Pain Research

Chalmers, Elektroteknik, System- och reglerteknik

Eric Earley

Center for Bionics and Pain Research

Chalmers, Elektroteknik, System- och reglerteknik

Max Jair Ortiz Catalan

Sahlgrenska universitetssjukhuset

Chalmers, Elektroteknik, System- och reglerteknik

Center for Bionics and Pain Research

Göteborgs universitet

Scientific Reports

2045-2322 (ISSN) 20452322 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 1 10218

Ämneskategorier

Medicinska material och protesteknik

DOI

10.1038/s41598-022-13363-2

PubMed

35715459

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2022-07-18