Development and evaluation of a soft wearable weight support device for reducing muscle fatigue on shoulder

Compensating the weight of human limbs is important in reducing muscle fatigue experienced by manual laborers. In this study, a compact and lightweight soft wearable weight support device was developed and evaluated. The device supports gravitational force on the shoulder at any arm posture, althoug...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 12; no. 3; p. e0173730
Main Authors Park, Daegeun, Cho, Kyu-Jin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 14.03.2017
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Compensating the weight of human limbs is important in reducing muscle fatigue experienced by manual laborers. In this study, a compact and lightweight soft wearable weight support device was developed and evaluated. The device supports gravitational force on the shoulder at any arm posture, although there are some limitations in its assistive performance. The device actuator consists of a cam-rod structure, a tendon-driven mechanism, and a rubber band. The desired assistive torque is translated to the shoulder joint along a tendon routing structure. Device performance was evaluated by measuring muscle activation in with-assist and without-assist conditions. Muscle activation on the deltoid was measured by surface electromyography. An experimental protocol consisting of a series of exercises was executed with six healthy subjects. The subjects raised and lowered their arm from 0 to 100 degrees for 30 times under eight conditions, which were combined with-assist and without-assist conditions, and holding the horizontal angle of the arm at 0, 30, 60, or 90 degrees against the sagittal plane. Surface electromyography data were pre-processed and analyzed using a root mean square method. When muscle fatigue occurs, the root mean square of the surface electromyography increases nonlinearly. This was calculated using the standard deviation of the root mean square. Three of six subjects showed decreased variation of the root mean square between the exercises in the with-assist condition. One subject's result was significantly reduced (by about 57.6%) in the with-assist condition. In contrast, two subjects did not show significant difference between measurements taken in the with-assist and without-assist conditions. One subject was dropped from the experiment because the device did not fit the subject's body. In conclusion, the effectiveness of the soft wearable weight support device in supporting shoulder movements was verified through the decreased variation of muscle activation.
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Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Conceptualization: DGP KJC.Data curation: DGP KJC.Formal analysis: DGP.Funding acquisition: KJC.Investigation: DGP KJC.Methodology: DGP KJC.Project administration: DGP KJC.Resources: DGP KJC.Software: DGP.Supervision: DGP KJC.Validation: DGP KJC.Visualization: DGP.Writing – original draft: DGP.Writing – review & editing: DGP KJC.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0173730