| Literature DB >> 33746502 |
J T Lee1, H L Bartlett1, M Goldfarb1.
Abstract
This paper describes the design of a new type of knee prosthesis called a stance-control, swing-assist (SCSA) knee prosthesis. The device is motivated by the recognition that energetically-passive stance-controlled microprocessor-controlled knees (SCMPKs) offer many desirable characteristics, such as quiet operation, low weight, high-impedance stance support, and an inertially-driven swing-phase motion. Due to the latter, however, SCMPKs are also highly susceptible to swing-phase perturbations, which can increase the likelihood of falling. The SCSA prosthesis supplements the behavior of an SCMPK with a small motor that maintains the low output impedance of the SCMPK swing state, while adding a supplemental closed-loop controller around it. This paper elaborates upon the motivation for the SCSA prosthesis, describes the design of a prosthesis prototype, and provides human-subject testing data that demonstrates potential device benefits relative to an SCMPK during both non-perturbed and perturbed walking.Entities:
Keywords: MPK; Transfemoral; amputation; biomechanics; microprocessor- controlled knee; prosthesis
Year: 2019 PMID: 33746502 PMCID: PMC7977329 DOI: 10.1109/tmech.2019.2952084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE ASME Trans Mechatron ISSN: 1083-4435 Impact factor: 5.303