Abstract
Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering
Vol. 7:
327-360
(Volume publication date August 2005)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.bioeng.6.040803.140103)
First published online as a Review in Advance on March 23, 2005FUNCTIONAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION FOR NEUROMUSCULAR APPLICATIONS *P. Hunter PeckhamDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106; Department of Veterans Affairs, Cleveland, Ohio 44106; MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio 44109; email: pxp2@case.edu Jayme S. KnutsonDepartment of Veterans Affairs, Cleveland, Ohio 44106; email: jsk12@case.edu ▪ Abstract Paralyzed or paretic muscles can be made to contract by applying electrical currents to the intact peripheral motor nerves innervating them. When electrically elicited muscle contractions are coordinated in a manner that provides function, the technique is termed functional electrical stimulation (FES). In more than 40 years of FES research, principles for safe stimulation of neuromuscular tissue have been established, and methods for modulating the strength of electrically induced muscle contractions have been discovered. FES systems have been developed for restoring function in the upper extremity, lower extremity, bladder and bowel, and respiratory system. Some of these neuroprostheses have become commercialized products, and others are available in clinical research settings. Technological developments are expected to produce new systems that have no external components, are expandable to multiple applications, are upgradable to new advances, and are controlled by a combination of signals, including biopotential signals from nerve, muscle, and the brain. Cortical and subcortical correlates of functional electrical stimulation of wrist extensor and flexor muscles revealed by fMRI Human Brain Mapping 30(3):963-975 (2009) Maneuvers during legged locomotion Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science 19(2):026105 (2009) Motion control of musculoskeletal systems with redundancy Biological Cybernetics 99(6):503-516 (2009) Neural interfaces at the nanoscale Nanomedicine 3(6):823-830 (2009) Cortical excitability changes following grasping exercise augmented with electrical stimulation Experimental Brain Research 191(1):57-66 (2008)
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