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Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation

After above-knee amputation, the missing biological knee and ankle are commonly replaced with a passive prosthesis, which cannot provide net-positive energy to assist the user. During activities such as sit-to-stand, above-knee amputees must compensate for this lack of power using their upper body,...

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Autores principales: Hunt, Grace R., Hood, Sarah, Gabert, Lukas, Lenzi, Tommaso
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10079568/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36240032
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3214806
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author Hunt, Grace R.
Hood, Sarah
Gabert, Lukas
Lenzi, Tommaso
author_facet Hunt, Grace R.
Hood, Sarah
Gabert, Lukas
Lenzi, Tommaso
author_sort Hunt, Grace R.
collection PubMed
description After above-knee amputation, the missing biological knee and ankle are commonly replaced with a passive prosthesis, which cannot provide net-positive energy to assist the user. During activities such as sit-to-stand, above-knee amputees must compensate for this lack of power using their upper body, intact limb, and residual limb, resulting in slower, less symmetric, and higher effort movements. Previous studies have shown that powered prostheses can improve symmetry and speed by providing positive assistive power. However, we still lack a systematic investigation of the effect of powered prosthesis assistance. Without this knowledge, researchers and clinicians have no framework for tuning powered prostheses to optimally assist users. Here we show that varying the assistive knee torque significantly affected weight-bearing symmetry, effort, and speed during the stand-up movement in eight above-knee amputees. Specifically, we observed improvements in the index of asymmetry of the vertical ground reaction force at the point approximating maximum vertical center of mass acceleration, the integral of the intact vastus medialis activation measured using electromyography, and the stand-up duration compared to the passive prosthesis. We saw significant improvements in all three metrics when subjects used the powered prosthesis compared to the passive prosthesis. We saw improvements in all three metrics with increasing assistive torque levels commanded by the powered prosthesis. We also observed increased weight-bearing asymmetry at the end of movement, and increased kinematic asymmetry with increasing assistance from the powered prosthesis. These results show that powered prostheses can improve functional mobility, potentially increasing quality of life for millions of people living with above-knee amputations.
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spelling pubmed-100795682023-04-07 Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation Hunt, Grace R. Hood, Sarah Gabert, Lukas Lenzi, Tommaso IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng Article After above-knee amputation, the missing biological knee and ankle are commonly replaced with a passive prosthesis, which cannot provide net-positive energy to assist the user. During activities such as sit-to-stand, above-knee amputees must compensate for this lack of power using their upper body, intact limb, and residual limb, resulting in slower, less symmetric, and higher effort movements. Previous studies have shown that powered prostheses can improve symmetry and speed by providing positive assistive power. However, we still lack a systematic investigation of the effect of powered prosthesis assistance. Without this knowledge, researchers and clinicians have no framework for tuning powered prostheses to optimally assist users. Here we show that varying the assistive knee torque significantly affected weight-bearing symmetry, effort, and speed during the stand-up movement in eight above-knee amputees. Specifically, we observed improvements in the index of asymmetry of the vertical ground reaction force at the point approximating maximum vertical center of mass acceleration, the integral of the intact vastus medialis activation measured using electromyography, and the stand-up duration compared to the passive prosthesis. We saw significant improvements in all three metrics when subjects used the powered prosthesis compared to the passive prosthesis. We saw improvements in all three metrics with increasing assistive torque levels commanded by the powered prosthesis. We also observed increased weight-bearing asymmetry at the end of movement, and increased kinematic asymmetry with increasing assistance from the powered prosthesis. These results show that powered prostheses can improve functional mobility, potentially increasing quality of life for millions of people living with above-knee amputations. 2023 2023-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10079568/ /pubmed/36240032 http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3214806 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
spellingShingle Article
Hunt, Grace R.
Hood, Sarah
Gabert, Lukas
Lenzi, Tommaso
Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation
title Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation
title_full Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation
title_fullStr Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation
title_short Effect of Increasing Assistance From a Powered Prosthesis on Weight-Bearing Symmetry, Effort, and Speed During Stand-Up in Individuals With Above-Knee Amputation
title_sort effect of increasing assistance from a powered prosthesis on weight-bearing symmetry, effort, and speed during stand-up in individuals with above-knee amputation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10079568/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36240032
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3214806
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