A Better Prosthesis

Sandia invents sensor to learn about fit; system to make fit better.

Written bySandia National Laboratories
| 5 min read
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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — As an amputee walks on a prosthetic leg during the day, the natural fluid in the leg shifts and the muscles shrink slightly.

Now imagine the problem that poses for the fit of the prosthesis.

There’s a growing need for a solution. The national Amputee Coalition says nearly 2 million people in the United States live with limb loss, and about two-thirds have lost a lower limb. That could double by 2050 as diabetes increases. Diabetes is the leading cause of limb loss, accounting for more than 65,000 amputations a year nationwide. In addition, there were more than 1,500 major limb amputations from U.S. battle injuries in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2003 to 2013.

Sandia National Laboratories researcher Jason Wheeler has been studying prosthetics at the labs for a decade and is part of an Intelligent Systems, Robotics and Cybernetics group working to develop a sensor to tell how a limb changes, along with a system that automatically accommodates those changes. After additional testing and refinements, Wheeler hopes to find a company that wants to market the sensor system.

The interface, or socket, between a prosthesis and a limb is custom-made, starting with a cast of the area.

The socket follows that contour, and a clinician adjusts it for the best fit.

Since modifying a custom socket would be expensive and cumbersome and could require several fittings, Sandia adapted its technology to fit inside a liner made of elastomeric material similar in thickness to a gel liner.
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