Robotics: Top Prosthetic Limbs Bring Hope to Amputees

In the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing, the photo of Jeff Bauman Jr. being rushed to the hospital shortly after having his legs blown off brought us face to face with the grim reality that many victims of this tragedy would be undergoing limb amputation.
With the Modular Prosthetic Limb, researchers from Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab have successfully demonstrated the possibilities of controlling artificial limbs simply by thought. 

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY APPLIED PHYSICS LAB

But advances in prosthetic technologies over the last thirty years have far surpassed the crude, wooden models that once made having artificial limbs such a nuisance. In fact, today’s robotic and bionic devices are giving amputees nearly full restoration of their lost limbs.
Hugh Herr, head of the biomechatronics research group at MIT Media Lab and double leg amputee, says he predicts “bionics will catch on like wildfire.”
“It’s a win for the patient. It’s a win for the healthcare supplier and it’s a win for the payer,” Herr told Discovery News. “Right now the payers think that high tech is expensive and should be avoided. I’m trying to change that paradigm.”
While bionic prosthetics are more expensive on a device-by-device basis, Herr says they can help reduce secondary disabilities such as hip arthritis, knee arthritis and lower back pain that amputees often develop from using prosthetic limbs.
“Those secondary disabilities are what drive up health care costs,” he said. “If you can emulate nature, if you can truly replace a limb after amputation, those secondary disabilities will never emerge and that person will remain healthy for their entire life and won’t have these astronomically high health care payouts.”
Foot and ankle prosthetics have come a long since the SACH, the Solid Ankle, Cushion Heel, developed in the mid-1950s.

WILLOW WOOD

Herr says there have been three eras in prosthetic limb technology. First was the SACH foot era, which stands for Solid Ankle, Cushion Heel. Developed in the mid-1950s, the foot typically had a wood core, with a foam and rubber outer shell. While the artificial foot gave patients more stability, it offered little lateral movement.
“Foot-ankle prosthesis you could characterize as related to energy return during the push-off phase,” Herr said. “The SACH foot basically stores little to no energy, nor returns little to no energy,”
New models of the SACH foot with titanium cores are still used today, but are only recommended for patients with a low activity level.

The carbon graphite technology in the Flex Foot essentially puts a spring in the wearers step.

 

JULIAN FINNEY/GETTY IMAGES

For hundreds of years, prosthetic feet that were fundamentally similar to the SACH foot were widely used. During the 1980s, a new era began, when Herr says the Flex Foot carbon design changed that paradigm.
Developed by Van Phillips in 1984, Flex Foot’s carbon graphite technology essentially put a spring in the wearers step. By storing the kinetic energy of each step, the artificial foot allowed amputees to jump, walk and run at speeds of up to 28 feet per second. The Flex-Foot Cheetah blade is the technology’s most high performance model and primarily used for people with below-knee amputations. Though the cheetah blades allow wearers to run like the wind, Herr says carbon prosthetics still don’t provide a normal level of energy return.

The BiOm Ankle System is the first bionic ankle-foot device commercially available for lower-extremity amputees.

 

IWALK INC.

The third era is robotics or bionics, in which there’s an energy source and an actuator in the artificial limb that can produce energies greater than what a spring can produce. “For legs, we’ve just entered that era,” said Herr, whose BiOm Ankle System is a leader in the field.
As the first bionic ankle-foot device commercially available for lower-extremity amputees, the BiOm Ankle System reestablishes the biomechanics of the ankle-foot function across all walking speeds. The system’s comprehensive design emulates the muscles and tendons of the human ankle joint and puts forth more mechanical energy than it absorbs. This allows amputees to walk with a more natural gait at their own chosen speed, using the same amount of energy as a non-amputee.
Using three computers and six sensors BiOM’s processors are able to adjust stiffness in the ankle, spring equilibrium and propulsive torque 500 times a second. When an increase in torque is detected in the ankle joint, an actuator helps trigger more torque to modulate the foot’s push-off power, even at different velocities and inclines.

Icelandic company Ossur introduced their Symbionic Leg in 2011 as the world’s first complete bionic leg.

 

OSSUR

Ossur, the Icelandic company behind the cheetah blades, introduced their Symbionic Leg in 2011 as the world’s first complete bionic leg. It’s a combination of Ossur’s Rheo Knee and Proprio Foot.
Integrated sensors in the polyurethane knee monitor the weight, motion and force and onboard microcontrollers process that data while tracking gait patterns. An actuator interprets that data and initiates appropriate resistance in the knee joint whether a person is standing still, turning a corner or walking in a straight line.
The foot design is based on Flex-Foot technology and incorporates lightweight, durable carbon fiber packaged with Terrain Logic, an onboard artificial intelligence system that calculates sensor data and feeds it to an actuator, which then relays motion instructions to precision motors.
Touch Bionics’s iLimbs use muscle sensors placed on the skin of an amputees and just announced the first upper limb prosthesis controlled by a smartphone app. 

TOUCH BIONICS

Developed by Touch Bionics, iLimb uses muscle sensors placed on the skin of an amputees remaining stump. The electric signals generated by the wearer’s muscles control an onboard processor that’s embedded into the prosthetic hand. This myoelectric technology gives amputees a more precise range of control and movement, even giving them the ability to pick up coins.

BLOG: App Controls Bionic Hand

Most recently, Touch Bionics announced their iLimb Ultra Revolution will be the first upper limb prosthesis controlled by a smartphone app. The bionic hand features four individually articulating fingers and a rotating thumb that can either be controlled by the wearer’s muscle signals or the new Quick Grip app system that automatically forms the hand into preset grip patterns. By tapping the app, users can access 24 pre-programmed motions that assist with picking up objects, grasping tools or shoe-tying, to name just three.
DARPA helped develop two anthropomorphic modular prototype prosthetic arms, both of which offer increased range of motion, dexterity and control options. 

DEKA RESEARCH

When DARPA launched its $150 million Revolutionizing Prosthetics program in 2006, upper-limb prosthetic technology was lagging far behind lower-limb technology. Out of that program two anthropomorphic modular prototype prosthetic arms have emerged, both of which offer increased range of motion, dexterity and control options. «From that program there’s a number of technologies that have not been commercialized yet that I hope will be commercialized in the future,» said Herr. «One, of course, is Dean Kamen’s ‘Luke’ Arm.»
Nicknamed after the prosthetic worn by Luke Skywalker in «Star Wars,» Kamen’s DEKA Arm uses foot controls that work simultaneously with sensors in the device’s sockets. Wearers use the foot controls like a joystick to access the mechanical arm’s range of motion. The system even provides feedback via sensors worn on the amputee’s remaining part of the limb that let wearers know how hard they are grasping an object.
With a Modular Prosthetic Limb, nerves that previously went to a patient’s hand were re-routed to healthy muscles in the amputee’s stump.

 

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY APPLIED PHYSICS LAB

With the Modular Prosthetic Limb, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab has successfully demonstrated the possibilities of controlling artificial limbs simply by thought. Led by Michael McLoughlin and Albert Chi, the APL’s work compromises the second prototype of DARPA’s Revolutionizing Prosthetics program.
In testing the prosthetic arm, nerves that previously went to a patient’s hand were re-routed to healthy muscles in the amputees stump. Sensors on the skin picked up brain signals from those nerves, then translated those signals to the robotic arm.
For quadriplegics like Jan Sherman, who was recently featured on 60 Minutes, simply re-routing nerves is not an option. Under DARPA’s program, she had University of Pittsburgh neurosurgeon Elizabeth Tyler-Kabara implant two sensors about the size of a pea on her brain. The sensors were wired to two computer connection pedestals that stuck out on the top of her head. When «plugged in,» Sherman was able to move a robotic arm and hand merely with her thoughts.

Rex, el "hombre biónico" de un millón de dólares

Rex es un robot que tiene órganos artificiales, sangre sintética y extremidades robóticas que han sido hechas con lo último de la tecnología.

Londres (EFE). El Museo de la Ciencia de Londres exhibe desde mañana a Rex, el primer “hombre completamente biónico” con órganos artificiales, sangre sintética y extremidades robóticas que ha costado 640.000 libras (más de un millón de dólares).

Ideado, diseñado y montado por un grupo de expertos en robótica, Rex, de dos metros de altura, tiene bastante en común con Steve Austin, el hombre biónico que retrató la serie de televisión de los años 70 “El hombre de los seis millones de dólares”.

Con un rostro que le aporta humanidad, el hombre biónico incorpora algunos de los últimos avances de tecnología protésica, así como páncreas, riñón, bazo y tráquea artificiales, y un sistema circulatorio funcional.

Uno de los expertos que ha participado en su construcción, Richard Walker, señaló a la cadena BBC que el resultado del trabajo es “muy significativo”, pues ha permitido saber “lo cerca que las tecnologías protésicas están de reconstruir el cuerpo humano”.

LA TECNOLOGÍA BIÓNICA
Rex protagoniza mañana un documental de la cadena Channel 4, “Cómo construir un hombre biónico”, en el que también participa el psicólogo social suizo Bertolt Meyer, que nació sin mano derecha y lleva una prótesis biónica de 30.000 libras (casi 47 mil dólares).

“Algunas partes que hemos utilizado ya las llevan algunas personas que pueden vivir gracias a ellas. Las retinas artificiales permiten a la gente ver de nuevo. Hemos combinado estos avances con lo último en robótica”, agregó Walker.

En el documental se verá cómo Meyer prueba extremidades protésicas modulares mucho más avanzadas que la suya.


“He seguido las nuevas tecnologías biónicas durante mucho tiempo y creo que hasta hace cinco o seis años no pasaba gran cosa. Y ahora, de repente, estamos en un punto donde podemos construir un cuerpo que es magnífico y bonito de una manera propia y especial”, manifestó el psicólogo.