Effects of a Wearable Assistive Device on Postural Control and Stability During Symmetric and Asymmetric Intermittent Trunk Flexion Tasks

Assistive devices, such as Exoskeletons (EXOs) can enhance endurance, but could inadvertently alter body mechanics, compromise balance, and elevate fall risk, particularly under fatigue. We evaluated effects of an EXO on postural stability during standing still and sustained trunk flexion tasks as u...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pranav Madhav Kuber, Ehsan Rashedi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-04-01
Series:Bioengineering
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5354/12/5/456
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Summary:Assistive devices, such as Exoskeletons (EXOs) can enhance endurance, but could inadvertently alter body mechanics, compromise balance, and elevate fall risk, particularly under fatigue. We evaluated effects of an EXO on postural stability during standing still and sustained trunk flexion tasks as users become fatigued during intermittently performed tasks. As trunk bending is common across many occupational/routine tasks, a repetitive 45° trunk flexion task was selected. In this controlled laboratory study, symmetric and asymmetric trunk flexion tasks were performed by twelve participants with a Back-support EXO until medium-high fatigue level (7/10 on Borg CR10 scale). Outcomes showed that the device increased trunk flexion durations (~16~25%), and upper-body movement beyond intended position. EXO-use improved stability by reducing maximum deviation (~22%) and mean velocity (~57%) of Center of Pressure (COP) co-ordinates. Asymmetric trunk flexion without assistance led to highest mean velocity of COP during fatigued state, but the same remained lower (~67%) with EXO-use, even with fatigue. The device decreased variance of COP during in medial/lateral direction (~44%), but increased the same in anterior/posterior direction by the same amount. Efforts in this study contribute towards understanding implications of using assistive devices for improving human performance across diverse applications.
ISSN:2306-5354