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Design and Development of a Quasi-Passive Transtibial Biarticular Prosthesis to Replicate Gastrocnemius Function in Walking
Author(s) -
Andrea M. Willson,
Chris A. Richburg,
Joseph M. Czerniecki,
Katherine M. Steele,
Patrick M. Aubin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of medical devices
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.242
H-Index - 29
eISSN - 1932-619X
pISSN - 1932-6181
DOI - 10.1115/1.4045879
Subject(s) - ankle , kinematics , work (physics) , gait , physical medicine and rehabilitation , biomechanics , treadmill , prosthesis , computer science , spring (device) , simulation , physical therapy , engineering , medicine , physics , structural engineering , mechanical engineering , anatomy , classical mechanics , artificial intelligence
Lower-limb amputees experience many gait impairments and limitations. Some of these impairments can be attributed to the lack of a functioning biarticular gastrocnemius (GAS) muscle. We propose a transtibial prosthesis that implements a quasi-passive spring mechanism to replicate GAS function. A prototype biarticular prosthesis (BP) was designed, built, and tested on one subject with a transtibial amputation. They walked on an instrumented treadmill with motion capture under three different biarticular spring stiffness conditions. A custom-developed OpenSim musculoskeletal model, which included the BP, was used to calculate the work performed and torque applied by the BP spring on the knee and ankle joints. The BP functioned as expected, generating forces with similar timing to GAS. Work transfer occurred from the ankle to the knee, with stiffer springs transferring more energy. Driven mostly by kinematics, the quasi-passive design of the BP consumed very low power (5.15 W average) and could lend itself well to future lightweight, low-power designs.

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