TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhancing Manual Wheelchair Propulsion
T2 - Incremental Assistance Levels of Pushrim-Activated Power-Assist Proportionally Reduce Physiological and Biomechanical Demands in Non-Disabled Participants
AU - Braaksma, Jelmer
AU - Groot, Sonja de
AU - Houdijk, Han
AU - Vegter, Riemer J.K.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This study assessed the effect of increasing assistance levels of a Pushrim-Activated Power-assisted Wheelchair (PAPAW) on the physiological and biomechanical demands in non-disabled participants propelling a manual wheelchair on an instrumented ergometer. This cross-sectional study included twenty-four non-disabled participants (aged 21.1⩲1.4 years) who performed 4 submaximal trials of 4-minutes propulsion (at 1.11m/s and 0.21W/kg body mass resistance) using no, low, medium and high power-assist modes of a PAPAW in counterbalanced order. Physiological strain, in terms of metabolic energy expenditure, heart rate and perceived exertion, was examined, along with the force and velocity data from the wheelchair ergometer and PAPAW. Repeated measures ANOVA revealed that metabolic energy expenditure decreased significantly with each incremental step of assistance (no: 299⩲43 W, low: 250⩲37 W, medium: 240⩲44 W, high: 224⩲38 W, p≤ 0.001 ), accompanied by similar reductions in heart rate and perceived exertion. Similarly, work per push decreased with each step (no: 16.9⩲6.2 J, low: 7.9⩲2.8 J, medium: 6.4⩲2.5 J, high: 5.5⩲1.4 J, p≤ 0.001 ). This can be explained by reductions in propulsive forces, which reached a floor effect with no further reduction between medium and high assistance levels, and a decreased contact angle. The level of PAPAW assistance progressively reduces the metabolic and biomechanical demands of manual wheelchair propulsion, potentially lowering the risk of overuse injuries and enhancing participation in daily activities and society. Further research should explore the optimal assistance level that reduces strain while maintaining physical fitness during everyday mobility.
AB - This study assessed the effect of increasing assistance levels of a Pushrim-Activated Power-assisted Wheelchair (PAPAW) on the physiological and biomechanical demands in non-disabled participants propelling a manual wheelchair on an instrumented ergometer. This cross-sectional study included twenty-four non-disabled participants (aged 21.1⩲1.4 years) who performed 4 submaximal trials of 4-minutes propulsion (at 1.11m/s and 0.21W/kg body mass resistance) using no, low, medium and high power-assist modes of a PAPAW in counterbalanced order. Physiological strain, in terms of metabolic energy expenditure, heart rate and perceived exertion, was examined, along with the force and velocity data from the wheelchair ergometer and PAPAW. Repeated measures ANOVA revealed that metabolic energy expenditure decreased significantly with each incremental step of assistance (no: 299⩲43 W, low: 250⩲37 W, medium: 240⩲44 W, high: 224⩲38 W, p≤ 0.001 ), accompanied by similar reductions in heart rate and perceived exertion. Similarly, work per push decreased with each step (no: 16.9⩲6.2 J, low: 7.9⩲2.8 J, medium: 6.4⩲2.5 J, high: 5.5⩲1.4 J, p≤ 0.001 ). This can be explained by reductions in propulsive forces, which reached a floor effect with no further reduction between medium and high assistance levels, and a decreased contact angle. The level of PAPAW assistance progressively reduces the metabolic and biomechanical demands of manual wheelchair propulsion, potentially lowering the risk of overuse injuries and enhancing participation in daily activities and society. Further research should explore the optimal assistance level that reduces strain while maintaining physical fitness during everyday mobility.
KW - Assistive technologies
KW - biomechanics
KW - patient rehabilitation
KW - physiology
KW - wheelchairs
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001216699&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TNSRE.2025.3547052
DO - 10.1109/TNSRE.2025.3547052
M3 - Article
C2 - 40048328
AN - SCOPUS:105001216699
SN - 1534-4320
VL - 33
SP - 1071
EP - 1078
JO - IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering
JF - IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering
ER -