| Literature DB >> 29298708 |
Wolf Schweitzer1, Michael J Thali2, David Egger3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prosthetic arm research predominantly focuses on "bionic" but not body-powered arms. However, any research orientation along user needs requires sufficiently precise workplace specifications and sufficiently hard testing. Forensic medicine is a demanding environment, also physically, also for non-disabled people, on several dimensions (e.g., distances, weights, size, temperature, time).Entities:
Keywords: Artificial arm; Artificial limbs; Body-powered prosthetic arm; Myoelectric prosthetic arm; Prosthesis design; User-driven design
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29298708 PMCID: PMC5751817 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-017-0340-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 4.262
Fig. 1On location – Death scenes that warrant a board certified senior forensic pathologist to travel on location and perform a full body investigation with forensic scientists and photography usually are “extraordinarily extraordinary”. Indoors or outdoors work [a: simulated/staged teaching death scene mock-up showing protective gear (arrow) – the body will be fully undressed, without cutting clothes, and then turned over and back while obtaining a detailed body surface inspection; b: outdoors death scene with burn victim on passenger seat (arrow) in a -15 deg C winter night with ice and snow covered roads] usually is problematic on several levels; at this particular death scene with the burnt car, several specialists repeatedly fell to the ground due to extremely slippery and steep ground. Undressing and examining a body from all angles (c: deep hand / finger injury, details in D through F) requires careful preservation of losely attached evidence so that even an attacker’s hair remains in place (c, d: dressed body; e, f: undressed). Attacker was a cat in this instance
Prosthetic suspension, control and overall prosthesis related observations
| Task/issue | TBI (iLimb) | CBPA (body-powered) |
|---|---|---|
| Carry items for more than 8m distanceb. | Frequent drops due to postural interference [ | No problem. |
| Pulling or lifting bodies (typically 60–90 kg). | Excessive pull displaced or detached skin-electrode contact [ | No problem. |
| Sweat issuesb. | Electrode control loss after 10 min with shortest examinations of 30 min [ | No problem other than having to pour out sweat occasionally. |
| Typingb [ | Shoulder and elbow pain due to (a) distal weight / center of COG [ | No problem. Weight and design of split hook, prehensor and wrist optimal for highly repetitive hard push operations. Ideal posture with Hosmer model 5 series hooks. |
| Meetings, presentationsb. | The prosthesis attracted unwarranted and irritated attention, also by being unreliable, which in part was seen a consequence of limb positioning effect [ | The CBPA’s wrist unit allowed for rapid swaps of the terminal device (split hook) against a prosthetic hand. such as the Becker hand. As this device worked flawlessly with regard to grip reliability and no noise, it did not distract others nearly as much. |
| Overall reliability. | Battery [ | Occasional repair necessary after wear down of cable or supporting structures, with a frequency of about once every 9 to 12 months. |
| Cost for operating or running the deviceb. | Each glove around 300-700 USD, lasting up to 10 min even under light work conditions. Device at 80,000 USD. For a 3 year period of use with 12 weeks of on-call work, 10 hours per day with 7 days a week, assuming that a glove withstands 3 hours of actual work usage (which it does not), an hourly hardware cost of 198 USD/ hour is obtained. | No glove or weardown issues; split hook claws can be covered with silicone tubing if required (a few cents per fitting). Prosthetic arm at 6,000 USD, custom shoulder anchor at 3,000 USD, custom wrist at 1,500 USD, prosthetic split hook or prehensor at 400 to 1,200 USD. Becker hand 650 USD. For the same 3 year period of use, hourly hardware cost of about 5 USD results (about 2% of TBI). |
aNot acceptable / not negotiable in work environment
bRated just as good or better without prosthesis
Terminal device related observations
| Task | TBI (iLimb) | CBPA (body-powered) - Hosmer hook 5XA | CBPA (body-powered) - TRS adult prehensor | CBPA (body-powered) - Becker hand |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading car, carrying items for more than 8m distance. | Useful grip for cut out box handles, not useful for recessed grip grooves. Limb positioning effect [ | No problem. Great balance for posturec. | No problem. Requires focus to keep cable tense (VC paradigm). | No problem. Great balance for posture. |
| Taking notes holding notepad in the field | Feasible but not ideal. Clumsy grip types with unforeseeable force vectorsb. | No problem.c | No problem but requiring focus to keep cable tense (VC paradigm)b. | No problem. |
| Undressing body | Grip by far too weakb. | Good support, finding right angle for best grip requires attentionb. | Perfect support, top application domain for VC control paradigm.c | Perfect support due to shape and built-in grip lock. |
| Turning or transporting body (Fig. | Grip by far too weak. Suspension started to come offb. | Good support, but grip forces sometimes not large enoughb. | Perfect support, top application domain for VC control paradigm.c | Good support, but grip forces sometimes not large enoughb. |
| Lab work (Fig. | Grip too weak. Limb positioning effect [ | Good support, but grip forces sometimes not large enough. | Perfect support, top application domain for the VC control paradigmc. | Good support, but grip forces sometimes not large enough. |
| Cleaning, disinfecting terminal device. | Costly thin cosmetic glove not to be replaced by user; no work rubber glove to be worn according to manufacturer [ | Metal split hooks easy to swap or disinfect. Wearing thick rubber glove over hook device not technically difficult and not prohibited by manufacturer. | Wearing rubber glove fingers to TRS prehensor allows for easy disinfection; not prohibited by manufacturer specifications. | Becker hand fits humanly used rubber protection gloves, that can be worn as they both fit well and are not prohibited by manufacturer specifications. |
| Typing | COG too far in front, device too heavy. Device shape and weight cause shoulder pain. Suspension results in severe friction problems on stump skin after long typingab. | Perfect.c | Good, but Hosmer 5XA has the better angleb. | COG too far in front, and Hosmer 5XA has the better angleb. |
| Meetings, presentations | Grip problems as the hand does not handle large pens with difficult to tear of caps well. Loud source of distraction [ | Handles paperwork and pens well. | Handles paperwork and pens well. | Perfect, least amount of distraction with grip suited well to typical tasksc. |
| Soft covers for terminal device | Gloves very thin to avoid impeding hand mechanism. Perforating damage [ | Silicone tubing affordable, easy to mount, enhance form closure. Under full work load, replace after 1–2 weeks. | Sheet rubber, double sided tape and work glove nitrile fingers are placed on the claws to enhance form closure. Under full work load, replace after 1–2 weeks. | Fits humanly worn normal work gloves such as nitrile work gloves to enhance form closure and grip. Under full work load, replace after 1–2 weeks. |
aNot acceptable / not negotiable in work environment (e.g. due to item being costly or irreplaceable or hazardous or trace relevant or contaminant)
bIs performed just as well or better without prosthesis with result focus on task. VC: voluntary closing
chighlight best choice for terminal device (where applicable)
Fig. 2Occupational strains – a: Duration of deployment correlates with excessive sweat; myoelectric sensors start to usually fail due to sweat (purple line) after 10 min of bodily exertion, a third of a minimal duration of a death scene investigation; after 1 h working on scene, excessive sweating occurs in 50% of all cases and before 2 hours are reached in all cases; logistic regression (blue curve) indicates that excessive sweating occurs in over ∼ 85% of cases with duration of deployment over 1,5 hours; Chi-Square LR p < 0.001. b: Half of the non-remote but all of the remote locations generated excessive sweating (Chi Square LR p=0.0036). c: When undressing a body was a requirement, excessive sweating occurred in 60% of the cases but just in 25% when body was found naked (Fisher’s Exact Test: n.s
Fig. 3a: Manner of death (x-axis) correlates with required manual skill level (MSL) (y-axis; color code see right side of diagram) in that suspected homicide cases require a MSL of 8 to 10, whereas other manner of deaths range from 3 to 10; the differences between the manner of death categories with regard to MSL are statistically significant (Chi Square LR p=0.0013). b: Manner of death (x-axis) also significantly correlates with sweating being a significant workplace issue for suspected homicides (100%), accidents (80%) and others (about 50%). The differences between manner of death categories with regard to excessive sweating occurring are statistically significant (Chi Square LR p=0.005)
Fig. 4Principal Component Analysis (PCA) shows that the actual factors directly impacting excessive sweat causing soaked clothes are duration of deployment and manual skill level estimate. Ambient temperature correlates negatively with excessive sweating in that very cold death scenes are usually outside and do not always allow for an excessively differentiated clothing layer adaptation due to the nature of these scenes. Weight of body, and requirement to undress the body pale against these in comparison for the examiner in question
Fig. 8Changing terminal device position. Left image: pull out terminal device by a few millmeters. Turn it. Push it back in. – Closing the wrist lock. Middle image: Grab wrist unit. Turn it to allow it to slide back. Right image: Allow wrist unit to slide back. It is pushed into the ’locked’ position ny action of internal springs
Fig. 5a: Conventional figure-nine harness (Otto Bock, Germany) compresses the brachial plexus (red star: compression point on brachial plexus, green star: humeral head and deltoid muscle for orientation; matching anatomy diagram in b) in what is a well known problem, also for backpacks. b: brachial plexus (nerve structures, highlighted red) with harness compression point (red star) in comparison with location of humeral head and compression point for shoulder anchor as shown in c. c, d: New development with a composite flexible thermoplastic EVA (ethyl-vinly acetate) and rigid carbon fiber shoulder anchor that effectively solves the problem by shifting the pressure point to the humeral head and deltoid muscle (green star) while relieving the brachial plexus (red star) by virtue of a rigid bridge
Fig. 6“PUPPCHEN” wrist – design details [106]: It contains one part, the wrist mount proper, that resides on the end of the prosthetic socket (#3) and a second part, an adaptor, that resides on the terminal device (#4). The design principle of the lock uses balls (#3, B). They hold the adaptor (#4) inside the socket-side wrist unit (#3) by residing in a circular groove of that adaptor (#4, H). The pressure on these balls force them inside that circular groove. That pressure can be released by turning the lock (#3, D) in such a way that a shoulder inside that lock (#3, A) is displaced so that the balls (#3, B) can slide back and release the adaptor (compare #1 and #2: black square). Rotation of the terminal device is prevented by interlocking the adaptor’s lower rim (#4, K) with a matching ring contained in the wrist (#3, C). The locking/unlocking switch (#3, D) is pushed up by virtue of springs at its base (#3, E). When unlocking the wrist (#2), these springs (#3, E) get squeezed
Fig. 7Opening the locked wrist lock. Left image: Grab wrist unit with a firm grip. Middle image: Pull wrist unit towards socket. Right image: Turn wrist unit to lock it in the ’open’ position
Fig. 9a: Wrist unit (diagram see Fig. 6, usage Figs. 7- 8) with socket mounted side (1) and terminal device adapters (2: UNF 1/2-20 threading; 3,4: Otto Bock sub-16mm diameter). b, c: assembled CBPA with (1) terminal device, (2) wrist, (3) carbon fiber socket, (4) cable, (5) shoulder mount/brace
Fig. 10Bowden cable setup [105]: bendable but not stretchable element (6) on which two anchor points (4,5) are mounted between which the cable housing, sheath or conduit (3) for a cable (1,2) is placed so that any pull along the cable will forcedly press the endings of the sheath/conduit/housing (3) firmly into the anchor points (4,5) which as a design principle requires that the distance between the anchorpoints (4,5) is always smaller than the length of the conduit (3)