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About
The goal of this clinical trial is to to confirm the safety and performance of the ABLE Daily to perform ambulatory functions in home and community settings for people with spinal cord injury.
The experimental period will cover the training period with the ABLE Daily exoskeleton (3 weeks of use at the investigational site with a total of 9 sessions) and the home period (12 weeks of personal use at home and community environments).
Full description
The ABLE Daily Exoskeleton is a wearable powered lower-limb exoskeleton that actively assists individuals with spinal cord injury to stand up, walk, ascend and descend a ramp of 5 degrees and sit down. The device consists of a rigid brace that attaches to the torso, legs and feet of the user via straps and supports. It is a bilateral robotic exoskeleton with four battery-powered motors that drive the knee and hip joints assisting in flexion-extension. The other degrees of freedom of the hip and knee joints are restricted. The ankle joint of the exoskeleton is passively articulated with a spring within a limited range of motion.
The experimental period will cover the training period happening at the investigational site where the participants and their companions will be trained 3 times a week. They will then have to perform a community skills test, if passed they will be allowed to take the exoskeleton home and use it in their daily life for 12 weeks. Pre and post assessments will be made.
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Noel Keijsers; Daphne Oosterling
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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