Children with Unilateral Congenital Below-Elbow Deficiencies (born without a hand, UCBED) have a high rate of prosthetic abandonment, pointing to unresolved challenges that may be distinct from those faced by adults with limb loss. There is limited knowledge of the motor control these children have over their affected muscles, a highly relevant question for effective dextrous prosthetic control. Our research aims to measure the extent of volitional muscle activation that exists in the residuum when children attempt moving their missing hand, with the goal of creating highly functional pediatric-specific prosthetic devices. In this work, we recruited 28 pediatric UCBED patients across four Shriners Hospital locations. We measured muscle activity using ultrasound imaging and surface electromyography while children attempted 10 missing-hand movements, then used machine learning to analyze the patterns of the affected and unaffected sides. Our algorithms predicted hand movements from residual muscle activity at over 80% accuracy in most cases, and well above chance in all participants. This indicates inherent muscular control which may be leveraged to develop more functional prosthetic devices tailored towards pediatric UCBED patients.
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Moving a missing hand: children born with below elbow deficiency can enact hand grasp patterns with their residual muscles
Abstract Children with a unilateral congenital below elbow deficiency (UCBED) have one typical upper limb and one that lacks a hand, ending below the elbow at the proximal/mid forearm. UCBED is an isolated condition, and affected children otherwise develop normal sensorimotor control. Unlike adults with upper limb absence, the majority of whom have an acquired loss, children with UCBED never developed a hand, so their residual muscles have never actuated an intact limb. Their ability to purposefully modulate affected muscle activity is often assumed to be limited, and this assumption has influenced prosthetic design and prescription practices for this population as many modern devices derive control signals from affected muscle activity. To better understand the motor capabilities of the affected muscles, we used ultrasound imaging to study 6 children with UCBED. We examined the extent to which subjects activate their affected muscles when performing mirrored movements with their typical and missing hands. We demonstrate that all subjects could intentionally and consistently enact at least five distinct muscle patterns when attempting different missing hand movements (e.g., power grasp) and found similar performance across affected and typically developed limbs. These results suggest that although participants had never actuated the missing hand they could distinctively and consistently activate the residual muscle patterns associated with actions on the unaffected side. These findings indicate that motor control still develops in the absence of the normal effector, and can serve as a guide for developing prostheses that leverage the full extent of these children’s motor control capabilities.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2133879
- PAR ID:
- 10543961
- Publisher / Repository:
- Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
- Volume:
- 21
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 1743-0003
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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