Upper Limb Amputation Below Elbow (Injury) Clinical Trial
Official title:
Myoelectric SoftHand Pro to Improve Prosthetic Function for People With Below-elbow Amputations: A Feasibility Study
A study to investigate the hypothesis that a Pisa/IIT Robotic SoftHand Pro converted to a prosthetic terminal device will enhance the performance of people with limb loss in a wider range of daily living tasks than allowed by today's commercially available prosthetic hands, and will exceed established benchmarks for activities of daily living (ADL).
Preliminary data suggest that the SoftHand Pro (SHpro) is extremely versatile and can be used
to grasp and manipulate common objects. We will perform extensive testing of the myoelectric
SHpro by asking subjects to perform a wide variety of ADL tasks in a structured environment
onsite at Mayo Clinic Rochester. These data will be used by the Mayo Clinic, ASU, and the IIT
research teams to modify the SHpro design to adapt it for use by people with amputations
while focusing on the SHpro socket design, surface electromyography (EMG)-based control
(typically used in commercially available prostheses today).
We will quantify the ability of patients with below-elbow amputation to perform the above
tasks using the prosthetic terminal device version of the SHpro. We hypothesize that people
with amputations will learn to use the SHpro and perform grasp and manipulation tasks to a
greater level than that allowed by their current terminal devices.
The long-term objectives of this exploratory study are to design and build a low-cost,
high-performance prosthetic hand terminal device that will be accepted by patients with
below-elbow amputation and allow them to perform a wider range of ADL tasks than allowed by
today's commercially available prostheses. The data collected through the proposed studies
will provide an important foundation for optimizing the design of the SHpro for future
testing on a large number of people with limb loss. Future studies will also assess the
extent to which the SHpro's functionality and acceptance might benefit from embedding
additional synergistic hand motion patterns in the SHpro.
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