DocumentCode
1181435
Title
Design characteristics of pediatric prosthetic knees
Author
Andrysek, Jan ; Naumann, Stephen ; Cleghorn, William L.
Author_Institution
Bloorview MacMillan Children´´s Centre, Toronto, Ont., Canada
Volume
12
Issue
4
fYear
2004
Firstpage
369
Lastpage
378
Abstract
We examined whether pediatric prosthetic single-axis knees can theoretically provide the beneficial functional characteristics of polycentric knees and the design considerations needed to realize this. Five children and their parents provided subjective opinions of the relative importance of functional requirements (FRs) for the knee. FRs related to comfort, fatigue, stability, and falling were found to be of high importance, while sitting appearance and adequate knee flexion were of lower importance. Relationships were drawn between these FRs and deductions were made regarding the importance of associated design parameters. Stance-phase control was rated to be of greatest importance followed by toe clearance. Models were developed for five knees including four- and six-bar knees, corresponding to two commercially available components, and for three configurations of a single-axis knee. Stance-phase control, specifically stability after heel-strike and swing-phase initiation at push-off, and toe clearance were simulated. The results suggest that a single-axis knee design incorporating stance-phase control will mutually satisfy the identified set of highly and moderately important FRs.
Keywords
biomechanics; fatigue; mechanical stability; paediatrics; prosthetics; children; comfort; fatigue; heel-strike initiation; knee flexion; pediatric prosthetic single-axis Knees; poly centric knees; sitting appearance; stability; stance-phase control; swing-phase initiation; toe clearance; Biomedical engineering; Councils; Couplings; Fatigue; Helium; Hospitals; Knee; Pediatrics; Prosthetics; Stability; Above-knee child amputee; design techniques; mechanical design; prosthetic knee joint; Amputation; Amputees; Child; Computer-Aided Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Humans; Knee Joint; Knee Prosthesis; Models, Biological; Needs Assessment; Patient Satisfaction; Prosthesis Design;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2004.838444
Filename
1366424
Link To Document