Department of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
J Biomech. 2019 Oct 11;95:109273. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2019.07.017. Epub 2019 Jul 26.
Individuals with lower-limb amputation often have difficulty walking on slopes, in part due to limitations of conventional prosthetic feet. Conventional prostheses have fixed ankle set-point angles and cannot fully replicate able-bodied ankle dynamics. Microprocessor-controlled ankles have been developed to help overcome these limitations. The objective of this study was to characterize how the slope adaptation feature of a microprocessor-controlled ankle affected individual prosthesis user gait biomechanics during sloped walking. Previous studies on similar microprocessor-controlled ankles have focused on group-level results (inter-subject mean), but did not report individual subject results. Our study builds upon prior work and provides new insight by presenting subject-specific results and investigating to what extent individual responses agree with the group-level results. We performed gait analysis on seven individuals with unilateral transtibial amputation while they walked on a 7.5° incline with a recently redesigned microprocessor-controlled ankle that adjusts ankle set-point angle to the slope. We computed gait kinematics and kinetics, and compared how users walked with vs. without this set-point adjustment. The microprocessor-controlled ankle increased minimum toe clearance for all subjects. Despite the microprocessor-controlled ankle behaving similarly for each user, we observed marked differences in individual responses. For instance, two users switched from a forefoot landing pattern with the microprocessor-controlled ankle locked at neutral angle to rearfoot landing when the microprocessor-controlled ankle adapted to the slope, while two maintained a forefoot and three maintained a rearfoot landing pattern across conditions. Changes in knee angle and moment were also subject-specific. Individual user responses were often not well represented by inter-subject mean. Although the prevailing experimental paradigm in prosthetic gait analysis studies is to focus on group-level analysis, our findings call attention to the high inter-subject variability which may necessitate alternative experimental approaches to assess prosthetic interventions.
下肢截肢者在斜坡上行走时常会感到困难,部分原因是传统假肢脚的局限性。传统假肢的踝关节设定点角度是固定的,无法完全复制健全人的踝关节动力学。为了克服这些限制,已经开发出了微处理器控制的踝关节。本研究的目的是描述微处理器控制的踝关节的坡度适应功能如何影响个体假肢使用者在斜坡行走时的步态生物力学。以前对类似微处理器控制的踝关节的研究集中在组水平结果(组内平均值)上,但没有报告个体受试者的结果。我们的研究建立在以前的工作基础上,通过呈现特定于个体的结果并研究个体反应在多大程度上与组水平结果一致,提供了新的见解。我们对 7 名单侧胫骨截肢者进行了步态分析,他们在一个 7.5°的斜坡上行走,使用最近重新设计的微处理器控制的踝关节,该踝关节将踝关节设定点角度调整到坡度。我们计算了步态运动学和动力学,并比较了使用者在有无这种设定点调整的情况下的行走方式。微处理器控制的踝关节增加了所有受试者的最小脚趾间隙。尽管微处理器控制的踝关节对每个用户的行为相似,但我们观察到个体反应存在明显差异。例如,两名使用者在微处理器控制的踝关节适应坡度时,从微处理器控制的踝关节锁定在中立角度的前足着地模式切换到后足着地,而两名使用者保持前足着地,三名使用者保持后足着地模式。膝关节角度和力矩的变化也是个体特异性的。个体使用者的反应往往不能很好地代表组内平均值。虽然在假肢步态分析研究中,普遍的实验范式是关注组水平分析,但我们的发现引起了人们对个体间高度变异性的关注,这可能需要替代实验方法来评估假肢干预措施。