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Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays

Interfacing anatomically conformal electronic components, such as sensors, with biology is central to the creation of next-generation wearable systems for health care and human augmentation applications. Thus, there is a need to establish computer-aided design and manufacturing methods for producing...

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Autores principales: Tong, Yuxin, Kucukdeger, Ezgi, Halper, Justin, Cesewski, Ellen, Karakozoff, Elena, Haring, Alexander P., McIlvain, David, Singh, Manjot, Khandelwal, Nikita, Meholic, Alex, Laheri, Sahil, Sharma, Akshay, Johnson, Blake N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6438526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30921360
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214120
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author Tong, Yuxin
Kucukdeger, Ezgi
Halper, Justin
Cesewski, Ellen
Karakozoff, Elena
Haring, Alexander P.
McIlvain, David
Singh, Manjot
Khandelwal, Nikita
Meholic, Alex
Laheri, Sahil
Sharma, Akshay
Johnson, Blake N.
author_facet Tong, Yuxin
Kucukdeger, Ezgi
Halper, Justin
Cesewski, Ellen
Karakozoff, Elena
Haring, Alexander P.
McIlvain, David
Singh, Manjot
Khandelwal, Nikita
Meholic, Alex
Laheri, Sahil
Sharma, Akshay
Johnson, Blake N.
author_sort Tong, Yuxin
collection PubMed
description Interfacing anatomically conformal electronic components, such as sensors, with biology is central to the creation of next-generation wearable systems for health care and human augmentation applications. Thus, there is a need to establish computer-aided design and manufacturing methods for producing personalized anatomically conformal systems, such as wearable devices and human-machine interfaces (HMIs). Here, we show that a three-dimensional (3D) scanning and 3D printing process enabled the design and fabrication of a sensor-integrated anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) in the form of personalized prosthetic hands that contain anatomically conformal electrode arrays for children affected by amniotic band syndrome, a common birth defect. A methodology for identifying optimal scanning parameters was identified based on local and global metrics of registered point cloud data quality. This method identified an optimal rotational angle step size between adjacent 3D scans. The sensitivity of the optimization process to variations in organic shape (i.e., geometry) was examined by testing other anatomical structures, including a foot, an ear, and a porcine kidney. We found that personalization of the prosthetic interface increased the tissue-prosthesis contact area by 408% relative to the non-personalized devices. Conformal 3D printing of carbon nanotube-based polymer inks across the personalized AHMI facilitated the integration of electronic components, specifically, conformal sensor arrays for measuring the pressure distribution across the AHMI (i.e., the tissue-prosthesis interface). We found that the pressure across the AHMI exhibited a non-uniform distribution and became redistributed upon activation of the prosthetic hand’s grasping action. Overall, this work shows that the integration of 3D scanning and 3D printing processes offers the ability to design and fabricate wearable systems that contain sensor-integrated AHMIs.
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spelling pubmed-64385262019-04-12 Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays Tong, Yuxin Kucukdeger, Ezgi Halper, Justin Cesewski, Ellen Karakozoff, Elena Haring, Alexander P. McIlvain, David Singh, Manjot Khandelwal, Nikita Meholic, Alex Laheri, Sahil Sharma, Akshay Johnson, Blake N. PLoS One Research Article Interfacing anatomically conformal electronic components, such as sensors, with biology is central to the creation of next-generation wearable systems for health care and human augmentation applications. Thus, there is a need to establish computer-aided design and manufacturing methods for producing personalized anatomically conformal systems, such as wearable devices and human-machine interfaces (HMIs). Here, we show that a three-dimensional (3D) scanning and 3D printing process enabled the design and fabrication of a sensor-integrated anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) in the form of personalized prosthetic hands that contain anatomically conformal electrode arrays for children affected by amniotic band syndrome, a common birth defect. A methodology for identifying optimal scanning parameters was identified based on local and global metrics of registered point cloud data quality. This method identified an optimal rotational angle step size between adjacent 3D scans. The sensitivity of the optimization process to variations in organic shape (i.e., geometry) was examined by testing other anatomical structures, including a foot, an ear, and a porcine kidney. We found that personalization of the prosthetic interface increased the tissue-prosthesis contact area by 408% relative to the non-personalized devices. Conformal 3D printing of carbon nanotube-based polymer inks across the personalized AHMI facilitated the integration of electronic components, specifically, conformal sensor arrays for measuring the pressure distribution across the AHMI (i.e., the tissue-prosthesis interface). We found that the pressure across the AHMI exhibited a non-uniform distribution and became redistributed upon activation of the prosthetic hand’s grasping action. Overall, this work shows that the integration of 3D scanning and 3D printing processes offers the ability to design and fabricate wearable systems that contain sensor-integrated AHMIs. Public Library of Science 2019-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6438526/ /pubmed/30921360 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214120 Text en © 2019 Tong et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tong, Yuxin
Kucukdeger, Ezgi
Halper, Justin
Cesewski, Ellen
Karakozoff, Elena
Haring, Alexander P.
McIlvain, David
Singh, Manjot
Khandelwal, Nikita
Meholic, Alex
Laheri, Sahil
Sharma, Akshay
Johnson, Blake N.
Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays
title Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays
title_full Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays
title_fullStr Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays
title_full_unstemmed Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays
title_short Low-cost sensor-integrated 3D-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: A case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (AHMI) using 3D-printed conformal electrode arrays
title_sort low-cost sensor-integrated 3d-printed personalized prosthetic hands for children with amniotic band syndrome: a case study in sensing pressure distribution on an anatomical human-machine interface (ahmi) using 3d-printed conformal electrode arrays
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6438526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30921360
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214120
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