Litcius/Paper detail

A lightweight robotic leg prosthesis replicating the biomechanics of the knee, ankle, and toe joint

Minh Tran, Lukas Gabert, Sarah Hood, Tommaso Lenzi

2022Science Robotics139 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Robotic leg prostheses promise to improve the mobility and quality of life of millions of individuals with lower-limb amputations by imitating the biomechanics of the missing biological leg. Unfortunately, existing powered prostheses are much heavier and bigger and have shorter battery life than conventional passive prostheses, severely limiting their clinical viability and utility in the daily life of amputees. Here, we present a robotic leg prosthesis that replicates the key biomechanical functions of the biological knee, ankle, and toe in the sagittal plane while matching the weight, size, and battery life of conventional microprocessor-controlled prostheses. The powered knee joint uses a unique torque-sensitive mechanism combining the benefits of elastic actuators with that of variable transmissions. A single actuator powers the ankle and toe joints through a compliant, underactuated mechanism. Because the biological toe dissipates energy while the biological ankle injects energy into the gait cycle, this underactuated system regenerates substantial mechanical energy and replicates the key biomechanical functions of the ankle/foot complex during walking. A compact prosthesis frame encloses all mechanical and electrical components for increased robustness and efficiency. Preclinical tests with three individuals with above-knee amputation show that the proposed robotic leg prosthesis allows for common ambulation activities with close to normative kinematics and kinetics. Using an optional passive mode, users can walk on level ground indefinitely without charging the battery, which has not been shown with any other powered or microprocessor-controlled prostheses. A prosthesis with these characteristics has the potential to improve real-world mobility in individuals with above-knee amputation.

Topics & Concepts

AnkleProsthesisBiomechanicsKinematicsComputer scienceGaitPhysical medicine and rehabilitationKnee JointSimulationMedicineArtificial intelligenceSurgeryAnatomyPhysicsClassical mechanicsProsthetics and Rehabilitation RoboticsMuscle activation and electromyography studiesAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials