4.7 Article

Toward Soft Wearable Strain Sensors for Muscle Activity Monitoring

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3196501

Keywords

Muscles; Sensors; Force; Torque; Capacitive sensors; Strain; Biomedical monitoring; Muscle activity monitoring; wearable sensors; muscle deformation sensors; soft strain sensors; biomedical transducers; biomedical monitoring

Funding

  1. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [R01DE013349]

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The force-generating capacity of skeletal muscle is crucial for evaluating musculoskeletal health. Traditional hardware for strength evaluation has limitations, while wearable soft strain sensors can continuously monitor muscle deformation, providing a richer dataset for strength assessment.
The force-generating capacity of skeletal muscle is an important metric in the evaluation and diagnosis of musculoskeletal health. Measuring changes in muscle force exertion is essential for tracking the progress of athletes during training, for evaluating patients' recovery after muscle injury, and also for assisting the diagnosis of conditions such as muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, or Parkinson's disease. Traditional hardware for strength evaluation requires technical training for operation, generates discrete time points for muscle assessment, and is implemented in controlled settings. The ability to continuously monitor muscle force without restricting the range of motion or adapting the exercise protocol to suit specific hardware would allow for a richer dataset that can help unlock critical features of muscle health and strength evaluation. In this paper, we employ wearable, ultra-sensitive soft strain sensors for tracking changes in muscle deformation during contractions. We demonstrate the sensors' sensitivity to isometric contractions, as well as the sensors' capacity to track changes in peak torque over the course of an isokinetic fatiguing protocol for the knee extensors. The wearable soft system was able to efficiently estimate peak joint torque reduction caused by muscle fatigue (mean NRMSE = 0.15 +/- 0.03 ).

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