| Literature DB >> 28286462 |
Philip Davenport1, Siamak Noroozi2, Philip Sewell2, Saeed Zahedi3.
Abstract
Suitable lower-limb prosthetic sockets must provide an adequate distribution of the pressures created from standing and ambulation. A systematic search for articles reporting socket pressure changes in response to device alignment perturbation was carried out, identifying 11 studies. These were then evaluated using the American Academy of Orthotists and Prosthetists guidelines for a state-of-the-science review. Each study used a design where participants acted as their own controls. Results were available for 52 individuals and five forms of alignment perturbation. Four studies were rated as having moderate internal and external validity, the remainder were considered to have low validity. Significant limitations in study design, reporting quality and in representation of results and the suitability of calculations of statistical significance were evident across articles. Despite the high inhomogeneity of study designs, moderate evidence supports repeatable changes in pressure distribution for specific induced changes in component alignment. However, there also appears to be a significant individual component to alignment responses. Future studies should aim to include greater detail in the presentation of results to better support later meta-analyses.Entities:
Keywords: Below-knee; Misalignment; Normal stress; Pressure distribution; Prostheses
Year: 2017 PMID: 28286462 PMCID: PMC5325859 DOI: 10.1007/s40846-017-0217-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Biol Eng ISSN: 1609-0985 Impact factor: 1.553
Fig. 1Potential alignment modifications to transtibial prostheses. The eighth possible adjustment—changes to pylon height—is not shown (and was not investigated by any included articles)
PICOS framework for inclusion of eligible studies
| Section | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Participants | • Unilateral transtibial amputees |
| Intervention | • Any (single or combination) of translation or rotation of prosthetic components that altered the geometric position of the artificial foot relative to the residual limb |
| Comparison | • Between altered alignment states and ‘normal’ or neutral’ conditions |
| Outcome | • Quantitative measurement of socket-residuum pressure (normal stress) |
| Study type | • Any primary research, including case series or case studies |
Eligible report characteristics
| Section | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Language | • Studies published in English |
| Publication type | • Peer reviewed journal articles of primary research (i.e., excluding literature reviews, letters to the editor, commentaries, etc.) |
| Publication date | • Database inception: April 2016 |
Database search strategy employed in this study
| Database | Search string |
|---|---|
| Web Of Science | (pressure* OR stress*) AND (angle OR *align* OR angular) AND (prosthe*) AND (transtibial OR trans-tibial OR below-knee OR “below knee”) |
| CINAHL | TX (pressure* OR stress) AND TX (angle OR *align* OR angular) AND TX prosthe* AND TX (transtibial OR trans-tibial OR below-knee OR “below knee”), Academic Journals Only |
| ScienceDirect | (trans$tibial OR “trans tibial” OR “below knee” OR below$knee) AND (pressure* OR stress*) AND (angle OR *align* OR angular) AND (prosthe*) |
| RECAL Legacya | pressure AND alignment AND below knee |
* A truncation character, $ a wildcard character. TX indicates terms were extended to the full text of records
aIndexing to the RECAL database concluded in 2007, and so results were available from inception to 2007 only
Fig. 2Flowchart of the literature search and study selection process
Definition of confidence levels in conclusions
| Rating | Description |
|---|---|
| High | High confidence can be placed in the findings of this investigation. The article is methodologically strong, or has methodological issues that are unlikely to impact the confidence with which the outcome statement can be made. Tests of statistical significance have been undertaken |
| Moderate | Moderate confidence can be placed in the findings from this investigation. There are some methodological issues that detract from our confidence in the findings |
| Low | Low confidence can be placed in the findings from this investigation. There are significant methodological issues which compromise the confidence with which outcome statements can be made |
Description of all studies meeting the inclusion criteria
| Lead authors | Years | Participants | Gender | Measurement sites | Transducer types | Collection frequency | Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pearson et al. [ | 1973 | 10a | 10M | Patellar tendon, distal anterior tibia, lateral/medial tibia | Diaphragm SG | NR | A/P −10/−5/0/5/10 mm |
| Winarski and Pearson [ | 1987 | 2 | NR | Patellar tendon, gastrocnemius | Diaphragm SG | 200 Hz | F/E −10/−6/−3/0/3/6/10° |
| Sanders et al. [ | 1993 | 3 | 3M | Antero-medial proximal, antero-lateral–distal, antero-medial–distal–lateral, postero-proximal, postero-distal | Piston SG | 125 Hz | Ankle DF/PF 6/0/−9° |
| Sanders et al. [ | 1998 | 2 | 2M | Antero-lateral–distal, antero-lateral–medial, antero-lateral-mid, antero-medial-mid, antero-lateral–proximal, antero-medial proximal, lateral–distal, lateral–proximal–distal, lateral-mid, lateral–proximal, posterior distal, posterior-mid, popliteal fossa | Piston SG | 175 Hz | Subject specific |
| Zhang et al. [ | 1998 | 1b | NR | Lateral condyle, medial condyle, patellar tendon, lateral tibia, medial tibia, antero-distal, popliteal depression, medial gastrocnemius, lateral gastrocnemius | Piston SG | 200 Hz | F/E −8/0/8° |
| Sanders and Daly [ | 1999 | 3 | 3M | As in Sanders et al. [ | Piston SG | 125 Hz | Subject specific |
| Seelen et al. [ | 2003 | 17 | 11M, 6F | Array measurement on anterior, medial and lateral aspects | Point FSR | 50 Hz | 5 mm heel and forefoot wedging |
| Kang et al. [ | 2006 | 10 | NR | Array measurement | Array FSR | NR | F/E 10/5/0° |
| Jia et al. [ | 2008 | 1 | 1M | Array measurement | Array FSR | 50 Hz | F/E −6/0/6° |
| Neumann et al. [ | 2013 | 2c | 1M, 1F | Array measurement, regions selected on patellar tendon, popliteal depression, distal tibia and gastrocnemius | Array FSR | 200 Hz | A/P −5/0/5 mm |
| Courtney et al. [ | 2016 | 1 | 1M | Array measurement | Array FSR | NR | A/P −10/0/10 mm |
NR not reported, A/P anterior–posterior, M/L medial–lateral, F/E flexion–extension, Ab/Ad abduction–adduction, DF/PF dorsiflexion–plantarflexion, SG strain gauge, FSR force sensitive resistor
aOf the 10 participants, results for coronal plane alignment changes were reported for a single subject only
bAlthough Zhang et al. recruited five participants, only one took part in alignment alteration measurements
cNeumann recruited four participants; however equipment failure meant that results for only two were available
Fig. 3a Distribution of date of publication of selected studies. b Publication venue of included studies. c Nationality of study participants in included reports. d Reasons for amputation in study participants in included reports. Kang 2006 is reported as vascular although the article reports that cause was “vascular disease such as trauma or diabetes mellitus”. e The tested socket design of study participants in included reports. PTB patella tendon bearing, TSB total socket bearing. Sanders 1999 used participants who habitually used PTB sockets, but test prostheses were manufactured using computer aided design and manufacturing. Courtney 2016 is reported as one PTB and one hydrocast socket as both designs were tested on a single participant
Internal validity scoring
| Lead authors | Years | IV6 | IV7 | IV8 | IV9 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | b | c | a | b | c | a | b | c | d | a | b | c | ||
| Pearson | 1973 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||||
| Winarski | 1987 | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||||||
| Sanders | 1993 | x | x | |||||||||||
| Sanders | 1998 | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Zhang | 1998 | x | x | x | x | |||||||||
| Sanders | 1999 | x | x | x | x | |||||||||
| Seelen | 2003 | x | x | x | x | |||||||||
| Kang | 2006 | x | x | x | x | |||||||||
| Jia | 2008 | x | x | x | x | |||||||||
| Neumann | 2013 | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Courtney | 2016 | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||||||
x indicates the presence of a concern within a particular study. Each assessment criteria is described in Appendix
External validity scoring
| Lead authors | Years | EV1 | EV2 | EV3 | EV4 | EV5 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | a | b | c | a | b | c | a | b | c | a | b | ||
| Pearson | 1973 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||
| Winarski | 1987 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| Sanders | 1993 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||
| Sanders | 1998 | x | x | x | x | x | |||||||
| Zhang | 1998 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||||
| Sanders | 1999 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||||
| Seelen | 2003 | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||||||
| Kang | 2006 | x | x | x | x | ||||||||
| Jia | 2008 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||||
| Neumann | 2013 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||||
| Courtney | 2016 | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |||||
x indicates the presence of a concern within a particular study. Each assessment criteria is described in Appendix
Internal and external validity ratings of each included study
| Lead authors | Years | Internal validity rating | External validity rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pearson | 1973 | Low | Low |
| Winarski | 1987 | Low | Low |
| Sanders | 1993 | Low | Low |
| Sanders | 1998 | Moderate | Moderate |
| Zhang | 1998 | Low | Low |
| Sanders | 1999 | Moderate | Moderate |
| Seelen | 2003 | Moderate | Moderate |
| Kang | 2006 | Moderate | Moderate |
| Jia | 2008 | Low | Low |
| Neumann | 2013 | Low | Low |
| Courtney | 2016 | Low | Low |
Evidence summary with associated confidence
| Confidence | Lead authors | Key conclusions |
|---|---|---|
| High | N/A | None |
| Moderate | Sanders (1998) | • The majority of measured sites demonstrate significant pressure changes with alignment modification, with an emphasis on the posterior surface |
| Sanders (1999) | • Misalignment effects are similar in magnitude to within and between session variances in experienced participants | |
| Seelen | • Plantarflexion increases subpatellar pressure and decreases tibial end pressure. Dorsiflexion decreases subpatellar pressure and increases tibial end pressure | |
| Kang | • A/P realignment alters pressure distribution in a systematic and consistent manner, including significant changes at the subpatella and tibial end regions | |
| Low | Pearson | • Greater sensitivity to angular changes than translation changes |
| Sanders (1993) | • Wave form shape changes were not consistent across sites or across subjects | |
| Jia | • Duration of sub-maximal pressure alters significantly, as does the time-pressure integral (to a greater extent than peak pressure alone) | |
| Neumann | • Fitted linear regression models are potentially unique for individuals and also for socket designs and alignments | |
| Courtney | • Individual responses are evident to alignment changes and associated socket design |
Key conclusions from included articles, grouped by confidence in conclusions. The papers by Winarski [38] and Zhang [41] did not draw conclusions suitable for inclusion