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Efficacy of passive upper-limb exoskeletons in reducing musculoskeletal load associated with overhead tasks

Yong‐Ku Kong, Jeong Ho Kim, Hyun-Ho Shim, Jin-Woo Shim, Sangsoo Park, Kyeong‐Hee Choi

2023Applied Ergonomics36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Overhead work can pose substantial musculoskeletal stress in many industrial settings. This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of passive upper-limb exoskeletons in reducing muscular activity and subjective discomfort ratings. In a repeated-measures laboratory experiment, 20 healthy male participants performed 10-min drilling tasks with and without two passive upper-limb exoskeletons (VEX and Airframe). During the tasks, muscle activity in eight muscles (upper limb - upper trapezius, middle deltoid, biceps brachii, triceps brachii; low back - erector spinae; lower limb - rectus femoris, biceps femoris, tibialis anterior) was collected using electromyography as a physical exertion measure. Subjective discomfort rating in six body parts was measured using the Borg's CR-10 scale. The results showed that muscle activity (especially in the upper-limb muscles) was significantly decreased by 29.3-58.1% with both exoskeletons compared to no exoskeleton condition. The subjective discomfort ratings showed limited differences between the conditions. These findings indicate that passive upper-limb exoskeletons may have potential as an effective intervention to reduce muscular loading and physical exertion during overhead work.

Topics & Concepts

BicepsExoskeletonElectromyographyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMedicineRating of perceived exertionUpper limbPhysical therapyBiceps femoris muscleExertionHeart rateBlood pressureRadiologyProsthetics and Rehabilitation RoboticsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationMuscle activation and electromyography studies