The Effects of Prosthesis Inversion/Eversion Stiffness on Balance-Related Variability During Level Walking: A Pilot Study

Author:

Kim Myunghee1,Lyness Hannah2,Chen Tianjian3,Collins Steven H.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607

2. Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

Abstract

Abstract Prosthesis features that enhance balance are desirable to people with transtibial amputation. Ankle inversion/eversion compliance is intended to improve balance on uneven ground, but its effects remain unclear on level ground. We posited that increasing ankle inversion/eversion stiffness during level-ground walking would reduce balance-related effort by assisting in recovery from small disturbances in frontal-plane motions. We performed a pilot test with an ankle-foot prosthesis emulator programmed to apply inversion/eversion torques in proportion to the deviation from a nominal inversion/eversion position trajectory. We applied a range of stiffnesses to clearly understand the effect of the stiffness on balance-related effort, hypothesizing that positive stiffness would reduce effort while negative stiffness would increase effort. Nominal joint angle trajectories were calculated online as a moving average over several steps. In experiments with K3 ambulators with unilateral transtibial amputation (N = 5), stiffness affected step-width variability, average step width, margin of stability, intact-foot center of pressure variability, and user satisfaction (p ≤ 0.05, Friedman's test), but not intact-limb evertor average, intact-limb evertor variability, and metabolic rate (p ≥ 0.38, Friedman's test). Compared to zero stiffness, high positive stiffness reduced step-width variability by 13%, step width by 3%, margin of stability by 3%, and intact-foot center of pressure variability by 14%, whereas high negative stiffness had opposite effects and decreased satisfaction by 63%. The results of this pilot study suggest that positive ankle inversion stiffness can reduce active control requirements during level walking.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

Reference63 articles.

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2. The Influence of Falling, Fear of Falling and Balance Confidence on Prosthetic Mobility and Social Activity Among Individuals With a Lower Extremity Amputation;Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil.,2001

3. Balance Confidence Among People With Lower Limb Amputation;Phys. Ther.,2002

4. Issues of Importance Reported by Persons With Lower Limb Amputations and Prostheses;J. Rehabil. Res. Dev.,1999

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