Extracorporeal closed-loop respiratory regulation for patients with respiratory difficulty using a soft bionic robot

IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2024 May 16:PP. doi: 10.1109/TBME.2024.3401713. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Respiratory regulation is critical for patients with respiratory dysfunction. Clinically used ventilators can lead to long-term dependence and injury. Extracorporeal assistance approaches such as iron-lung devices provide a noninvasive alternative, however, artificial actuator counterparts have not achieved marvelous biomimetic ventilation as human respiratory muscles. Here, we propose a bionic soft exoskeleton robot that can achieve extracorporeal closed-loop respiratory regulation by emulating natural human breath.

Methods: For inspiration, a soft vacuum chamber is actuated to produce negative thoracic pressure and thus expand lung volume by pulling the rib cage up and outward through use of external negative pressure. For expiration, a soft origami array under positive pressure pushes the abdominal muscles inward and the diaphragm upward. To achieve in vitro measurement of respiratory profile, we describe a wireless respiratory monitoring device to measure respiratory profiles with high accuracy, validated by quantitative comparisons with spirometer as gold-standard reference. By constructing a human-robot coupled respiratory mechanical model, a model-based proportional controller is designed for continuous tracking of the target respiratory profile.

Results: In experiments with ten healthy participants and ten patients with respiratory difficulty, the robot can adjust its assistive forces in real time and drive human-robot coupling respiratory system to track the target profile.

Conclusion: The biomimetic robot can achieve extracorporeal closed-loop respiratory regulation for a diverse population.

Significance: The soft robot has important potential to assist respiration for people with respiratory difficulty, whether in a hospital or a home setting.