Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact Leg

The purpose of the study was to analyse the flexion angles of the ski boot, ankle and knee joints of an above-knee prosthesis and to compare them with an intact leg and a control group of skiers. One subject with an above-knee amputation of the right leg and eight healthy subjects simulated the move...

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Main Author: Ivan Demšar, Jože Duhovnik, Blaž Lešnik, Matej Supej
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2015-12-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/research.php?id=jssm-14-841.xml
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spelling doaj-4b76626c7010402cab3908f17c9bde1f2020-11-24T22:04:08ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682015-12-01144841848Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact LegIvan Demšar, Jože Duhovnik, Blaž Lešnik, Matej Supej0Laboratory for Computer-Aided Design, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, SloveniaThe purpose of the study was to analyse the flexion angles of the ski boot, ankle and knee joints of an above-knee prosthesis and to compare them with an intact leg and a control group of skiers. One subject with an above-knee amputation of the right leg and eight healthy subjects simulated the movement of a skiing turn by performing two-leg squats in laboratory conditions. By adding additional loads in proportion to body weight (BW; +1/3 BW, +2/3 BW, +3/3 BW), various skiing regimes were simulated. Change of Flexion Angle (CoFA) and Range of Motion (RoM) in the ski boot, ankle and knee joints were calculated and compared. An average RoM in the skiing boot on the side of prosthesis (4.4 ± 1.1°) was significantly lower compared to an intact leg (5.9 ± 1.8°) and the control group (6.5 ± 2.3°). In the ankle joint, the average RoM was determined to be 13.2±2.9° in the prosthesis, 12.7 ± 2.8° in an intact leg and 14.8±3.6 in the control group. However, the RoM of the knee joint in the prosthesis (42.2 ± 4.2°) was significantly larger than that of the intact leg (34.7 ± 4.4°). The average RoM of the knee joint in the control group was 47.8 ± 5.4°. The influences of additional loads on the kinematics of the lower extremities were different on the side of the prosthesis and on the intact leg. In contrast, additional loads did not produce any significant differences in the control group. Although different CoFAs in the ski boot, ankle and knee joints were used, an above-knee prosthesis with a built-in multi-axis prosthetic knee enables comparable leg kinematics in simulated alpine skiing.http://www.jssm.org/research.php?id=jssm-14-841.xmlAbove-knee amputationAlpine skiingimpairmentkinematicsprosthesis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ivan Demšar, Jože Duhovnik, Blaž Lešnik, Matej Supej
spellingShingle Ivan Demšar, Jože Duhovnik, Blaž Lešnik, Matej Supej
Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact Leg
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Above-knee amputation
Alpine skiing
impairment
kinematics
prosthesis
author_facet Ivan Demšar, Jože Duhovnik, Blaž Lešnik, Matej Supej
author_sort Ivan Demšar, Jože Duhovnik, Blaž Lešnik, Matej Supej
title Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact Leg
title_short Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact Leg
title_full Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact Leg
title_fullStr Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact Leg
title_full_unstemmed Multi-Axis Prosthetic Knee Resembles Alpine Skiing Movements of an Intact Leg
title_sort multi-axis prosthetic knee resembles alpine skiing movements of an intact leg
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2015-12-01
description The purpose of the study was to analyse the flexion angles of the ski boot, ankle and knee joints of an above-knee prosthesis and to compare them with an intact leg and a control group of skiers. One subject with an above-knee amputation of the right leg and eight healthy subjects simulated the movement of a skiing turn by performing two-leg squats in laboratory conditions. By adding additional loads in proportion to body weight (BW; +1/3 BW, +2/3 BW, +3/3 BW), various skiing regimes were simulated. Change of Flexion Angle (CoFA) and Range of Motion (RoM) in the ski boot, ankle and knee joints were calculated and compared. An average RoM in the skiing boot on the side of prosthesis (4.4 ± 1.1°) was significantly lower compared to an intact leg (5.9 ± 1.8°) and the control group (6.5 ± 2.3°). In the ankle joint, the average RoM was determined to be 13.2±2.9° in the prosthesis, 12.7 ± 2.8° in an intact leg and 14.8±3.6 in the control group. However, the RoM of the knee joint in the prosthesis (42.2 ± 4.2°) was significantly larger than that of the intact leg (34.7 ± 4.4°). The average RoM of the knee joint in the control group was 47.8 ± 5.4°. The influences of additional loads on the kinematics of the lower extremities were different on the side of the prosthesis and on the intact leg. In contrast, additional loads did not produce any significant differences in the control group. Although different CoFAs in the ski boot, ankle and knee joints were used, an above-knee prosthesis with a built-in multi-axis prosthetic knee enables comparable leg kinematics in simulated alpine skiing.
topic Above-knee amputation
Alpine skiing
impairment
kinematics
prosthesis
url http://www.jssm.org/research.php?id=jssm-14-841.xml
work_keys_str_mv AT ivandemsarjozeduhovnikblazlesnikmatejsupej multiaxisprosthetickneeresemblesalpineskiingmovementsofanintactleg
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