Persons who walk with lower-limb prostheses are generally less efficient ambulators than able-bodied individuals (Waters et al., 1976) and their stability is compromised, attributable in part t deficiencies in the function of their prostheses (Gard & Fatone, 2004). Anatomical ankle joint stiffness in able-bodied persons adapts with walking speed (Hansen et al., 2004) and for standing (Hansen & Wang, 2010). Fitting lower-limb amputees with prosthetic foot and ankle mechanisms that attempt to replicate corresponding anatomical functions is desirable (Hansen et al., 2004a,b, 2007, 2010). We previously demonstrated that prosthetic ankle joints improve walking performance in persons with transtibial (below-knee) amputation (Su et al., 2008, 2009, 2010). In that study, research subjects clearly preferred walking with the prosthetic ankle components, but several indicated that they felt unstable during standing (Su et al., 2010). Subsequent analyses of those data indicated that the addition of a compliant prosthetic ankle unit significantly reduced the radius of the ankle-foot roll-over shape (Gard et al., 2011), which can adversely affect standing stability and gait performance (Gard & Childress, 2001; Klodd et al., 2010a,b). The purpose of this investigation is to determine how systematically varying the prosthetic foot keel stiffness and prosthetic ankle joint stiffness affects standing and walking in persons with unilateral, transtibial amputations.
The specific aims for this study are: 1. To determine how different combinations of prosthetic foot and ankle stiffness affect gait biomechanics of unilateral, transtibial prosthesis users. Kinematic, kinetic and energy expenditure data will be collected as subjects walk at different speeds and with different combinations of prosthetic foot and ankle stiffness. 2. To determine how different combinations of prosthetic foot and ankle stiffness affect standing stability of unilateral, transtibial prostheis users. Standing balance of subjects will be evaluated using a series of tests that measure balance and recovery stability as balance is perturbed. Subjects will also be administered questionnaires to document their perceptions of comfort, exertion and stability while using the different prosthetic foot-ankle configurations. Compliant foot-ankle mechanisms that allow for a normal range of ankle joint motion during walking are expected to increase gait performance, but decrease standing stability. Conversely, a rigid foot-ankle combination will likely maximize standing stability, but decrease gait performance. Determination of an optimal prosthetic foot and ankle stiffness combination will require a compromise between the apparent disparate objectives for these two activities. Increased understanding about how different prosthetic foot-ankle stiffness combinations affect standing and walking abilities will facilitate appropriate component selection by prosthetists, encourage development of prosthetic foot-ankle mechanisms with adaptable stiffness, and ultimately improve quality of life for prosthesis users.

Public Health Relevance

Stability is compromised in persons with leg amputations, placing them at greater risk of stumbling and falling. Balance problems on prostheses are related to limitations in current prosthetic componentry and to the inability of the user to make fine control adjustments in their prosthetic foot-ankle mechanisms to maintain stable upright balance. Increased understanding about how different prosthetic foot-ankle stiffness combinations affect standing and walking abilities will facilitate appropriate component selection by prosthetics, encourage development of prosthetic foot-ankle mechanisms with adaptable stiffness, and improve walking and standing performance for prosthesis users to ultimately improve quality of life. The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) reported that between 1989-1998, 27% of amputations were performed at the transtibial level (Mayfield et al., 2000). This emphasizes the strong relevance and potentially high impact of this research study on the vast majority of current VHA amputee patients, which is directly applicable to the VHA's Patient Care Mission.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Veterans Affairs (VA)
Type
Non-HHS Research Projects (I01)
Project #
5I01RX002107-02
Application #
9241896
Study Section
Rehabilitation Engineering & Prosthetics/Orthotics (RRD5)
Project Start
2016-02-01
Project End
2019-01-31
Budget Start
2017-02-01
Budget End
2018-01-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Jesse Brown VA Medical Center
Department
Type
Independent Hospitals
DUNS #
010299204
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60612