Title :
Effects of a powered ankle-foot prosthesis on kinetic loading of the contralateral limb: A case series
Author :
Hill, D. ; Herr, Hugh
Author_Institution :
Media Lab., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
Lower-extremity amputees encounter a series of stress-related challenges. Among them is an increased risk of chronic joint disorders. For unilateral, transtibial amputees, we hypothesize that increasing the power output of the trailing, ankle-foot prosthesis during powered plantar flexion could mitigate kinetic loading applied to the leading, contralateral leg during walking. Here, we present a case series that analyzes kinetic factors of unilateral, transtibial amputee gait and forms a comparison between two types of ankle prostheses with varying power outputs. The factors examined here are impact resultant force, peak foot pressure at heel-strike, step-to-step transition work, and knee external adduction moment. The two prostheses are the amputee participant´s daily-use passive ankle-foot prosthesis and the BiOM powered ankle-foot prosthesis capable of biologically accurate powered plantar flexion during late stance. In a preliminary study on two transtibial amputees walking over level terrain at a controlled speed (1.25 m/s), we observed average reductions of 8% in peak impact resultant force, 18% in impact resultant force loading rate, 8% in peak heel-strike foot pressure, and 15% in the 1st peak knee external adduction moment when the powered ankle-foot prosthesis was compared to the conventional passive prosthesis. Overall, our preliminary results suggest that more biomimetic prosthetic ankle-foot push-off during late stance may limit leading-leg musculoskeletal stress in walking.
Keywords :
handicapped aids; prosthetics; BiOM powered ankle-foot prosthesis; amputee participant daily-use; ankle-foot prosthesis; biomimetic prosthetic ankle-foot push-off; chronic joint disorders; contralateral leg; contralateral limb; impact resultant force loading rate; kinetic loading; knee external adduction moment; leading-leg musculoskeletal stress; lower-extremity amputees; passive ankle-foot prosthesis; peak foot pressure; peak heel-strike foot pressure; peak knee external adduction moment; powered ankle-foot prosthesis; powered plantar flexion; step-to-step transition work; stress-related challenges; transtibial amputee gait; varying power outputs; Foot; Force; Knee; Legged locomotion; Loading; Prosthetics; amputee; ankle; biomechanics; external adduction moment; gait; loading rate; pressure; prosthesis; resultant force; transtibial;
Conference_Titel :
Rehabilitation Robotics (ICORR), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-6022-7
DOI :
10.1109/ICORR.2013.6650375