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The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope

BACKGROUND: Lower limb amputees have a high incidence of comorbidities, such as osteoarthritis, which are believed to be caused by kinetic asymmetries. A lack of prosthetic adaptation to different terrains requires kinematic compensations, which may influence these asymmetries. METHOD: Six SIGAM gra...

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Autores principales: McGrath, M, Davies, KC, Laszczak, P, Rek, B, McCarthy, J, Zahedi, S, Moser, D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Canadian Online Publication Group 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10443501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37614771
http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/cpoj.v2i2.33517
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author McGrath, M
Davies, KC
Laszczak, P
Rek, B
McCarthy, J
Zahedi, S
Moser, D
author_facet McGrath, M
Davies, KC
Laszczak, P
Rek, B
McCarthy, J
Zahedi, S
Moser, D
author_sort McGrath, M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Lower limb amputees have a high incidence of comorbidities, such as osteoarthritis, which are believed to be caused by kinetic asymmetries. A lack of prosthetic adaptation to different terrains requires kinematic compensations, which may influence these asymmetries. METHOD: Six SIGAM grade E-F trans-tibial amputees (one bilateral) wore motion capture markers while standing on force plates, facing down a 5° slope. The participants were tested under three prosthetic conditions; a fixed attachment foot (FIX), a hydraulic ankle (HYD) and a microprocessor foot with a ‘standing support’ mode (MPF). The resultant ground reaction force (GRF) and support moment for prosthetic and sound limbs were chosen as outcome measures. These were compared between prosthetic conditions and to previously captured able-bodied control data. RESULTS: The distribution of GRF between sound and prosthetic limbs was not significantly affected by foot type. However, the MPF condition required fewer kinematic compensations, leading to a reduction in sound side support moment of 59% (p=0.001) and prosthetic side support moment of 43% (p=0.02) compared to FIX. For the bilateral participant, only the MPF positioned the GRF vector anterior to the knees, reducing the demand on the residual joints to maintain posture. CONCLUSIONS: For trans-tibial amputees, loading on lower limb joints is affected by prosthetic foot technology, due to the kinematic compensations required for slope adaptation. MPFs with ‘standing support’ might be considered reasonable and necessary for bilateral amputees, or amputees with stability problems due to the reduced biomechanical compensations evident.
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spelling pubmed-104435012023-08-23 The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope McGrath, M Davies, KC Laszczak, P Rek, B McCarthy, J Zahedi, S Moser, D Can Prosthet Orthot J Research Articles BACKGROUND: Lower limb amputees have a high incidence of comorbidities, such as osteoarthritis, which are believed to be caused by kinetic asymmetries. A lack of prosthetic adaptation to different terrains requires kinematic compensations, which may influence these asymmetries. METHOD: Six SIGAM grade E-F trans-tibial amputees (one bilateral) wore motion capture markers while standing on force plates, facing down a 5° slope. The participants were tested under three prosthetic conditions; a fixed attachment foot (FIX), a hydraulic ankle (HYD) and a microprocessor foot with a ‘standing support’ mode (MPF). The resultant ground reaction force (GRF) and support moment for prosthetic and sound limbs were chosen as outcome measures. These were compared between prosthetic conditions and to previously captured able-bodied control data. RESULTS: The distribution of GRF between sound and prosthetic limbs was not significantly affected by foot type. However, the MPF condition required fewer kinematic compensations, leading to a reduction in sound side support moment of 59% (p=0.001) and prosthetic side support moment of 43% (p=0.02) compared to FIX. For the bilateral participant, only the MPF positioned the GRF vector anterior to the knees, reducing the demand on the residual joints to maintain posture. CONCLUSIONS: For trans-tibial amputees, loading on lower limb joints is affected by prosthetic foot technology, due to the kinematic compensations required for slope adaptation. MPFs with ‘standing support’ might be considered reasonable and necessary for bilateral amputees, or amputees with stability problems due to the reduced biomechanical compensations evident. Canadian Online Publication Group 2020-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10443501/ /pubmed/37614771 http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/cpoj.v2i2.33517 Text en Copyright (c) 2020 Michael McGrath, Katherine C. Davies, Piotr Laszczak, Beata Rek, Joe McCarthy, Saeed Zahedi, and David Moser. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Articles
McGrath, M
Davies, KC
Laszczak, P
Rek, B
McCarthy, J
Zahedi, S
Moser, D
The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope
title The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope
title_full The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope
title_fullStr The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope
title_short The Influence of Hydraulic Ankles and Microprocessor-control on the Biomechanics of Trans-tibial Amputees During Quiet Standing on a 5° Slope
title_sort influence of hydraulic ankles and microprocessor-control on the biomechanics of trans-tibial amputees during quiet standing on a 5° slope
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10443501/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37614771
http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/cpoj.v2i2.33517
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