Abstract

The walking mechanism of a prosthetic leg user is a tightly coordinated movement of several joints and limb segments. The interaction among the voluntary and mechanical joints and segments requires particular biomechanical insight. This study aims to analyze the inter-relationship between amputees' voluntary and mechanical coupled leg joints variables using cyclograms. From this analysis, the critical gait parameters in each gait phase were determined and analyzed if they contribute to a better powered prosthetic knee control design. To develop the cyclogram model, 20 healthy able-bodied subjects and 25 prosthesis and orthosis users (10 transtibial amputees, 5 transfemoral amputees, and 10 different pathological profiles of orthosis users) walked at their comfortable speed in a 3D motion analysis lab setting. The gait parameters (i.e., angle, moment and power for the ankle, knee and hip joints) were coupled to form 36 cyclograms relationship. The model was validated by quantifying the gait disparities of all the pathological walking by analyzing each cyclograms pairs using feed-forward neural network with backpropagation. Subsequently, the cyclogram pairs that contributed to the highest gait disparity of each gait phase were manipulated by replacing it with normal values and re-analyzed. The manipulated cyclograms relationship that showed highest improvement in terms of gait disparity calculation suggested that they are the most dominant parameters in powered-knee control. In case of transfemoral amputee walking, it was identified using this approach that at each gait sub-phase, the knee variables most responsible for closest to normal walking were: knee power during loading response and mid-stance, knee moment and knee angle during terminal stance phase, knee angle and knee power during pre-swing, knee angle at initial swing, and knee power at terminal swing. No variable was dominant during mid-swing phase implying natural pendulum effect of the lower limb between the initial and terminal swing phases. The outcome of this cyclogram adoption approach proposed an insight into the method of determining the causal effect of manipulating a particular joint's mechanical properties toward the joint behavior in an amputee's gait by determining the curve closeness, C, of the modified cyclogram curve to the normal conventional curve, to enable quantitative judgment of the effect of changing a particular parameter in the prosthetic leg gait.

Highlights

  • Human walking is typically characterized by plotting kinematics and kinetics curves as a function of time or percentage of gait cycle

  • This study proposed a method of using the cyclograms as the cyclic representation of locomotion and two-variable interaction, to determine the most influential parameter in each gait subphases for the knee control design in transfemoral prosthesis

  • Except for TT5, TT6, TF4, and TF5 which shows that kinetics-kinetics relationship has high mean normalized error at terminal-stance (TSt), the rest showed that the kinematics-kinetics pair exhibits high mean normalized error

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Human walking is typically characterized by plotting kinematics and kinetics curves as a function of time or percentage of gait cycle These kinematics and kinetics curves became the primary guideline in the prosthetic leg design that would mimic the normal gait. A number of relevant dynamic effects can be identified when pairs of kinematics and kinetic variables are examined together and correlations among them were concurrently assessed (Crenna and Frigo, 2011). These combinations of kinematics and kinetics variables, omitting the time variables from the two signals, create different cyclic trajectories known as cyclograms (Goswami, 1998). This is the foundation of applying the cyclograms concept to determine the most influential knee parameter in producing closest to normal and most efficient gait

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call