Survey of transfemoral amputee experience and priorities for the user-centered design of powered robotic transfemoral prostheses

Transfemoral amputees experience a complex host of physical, psychological, and social challenges, compounded by the functional limitations of current transfemoral prostheses. However, the specific relationships between human factors and prosthesis design and performance characteristics have not yet...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neuroengineering and rehabilitation 2021-12, Vol.18 (1), p.168-168, Article 168
Hauptverfasser: Fanciullacci, Chiara, McKinney, Zach, Monaco, Vito, Milandri, Giovanni, Davalli, Angelo, Sacchetti, Rinaldo, Laffranchi, Matteo, De Michieli, Lorenzo, Baldoni, Andrea, Mazzoni, Alberto, Paternò, Linda, Rosini, Elisa, Reale, Luigi, Trecate, Fabio, Crea, Simona, Vitiello, Nicola, Gruppioni, Emanuele
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Transfemoral amputees experience a complex host of physical, psychological, and social challenges, compounded by the functional limitations of current transfemoral prostheses. However, the specific relationships between human factors and prosthesis design and performance characteristics have not yet been adequately investigated. The present study aims to address this knowledge gap. A comprehensive single-cohort survey of 114 unilateral transfemoral amputees addressed a broad range of demographic and clinical characteristics, functional autonomy, satisfaction and attitudes towards their current prostheses, and design priorities for an ideal transfemoral prosthesis, including the possibility of active assistance from a robotic knee unit. The survey was custom-developed based on several standard questionnaires used to assess motor abilities and autonomy in activities of daily living, prosthesis satisfaction, and quality of life in lower-limb amputees. Survey data were analyzed to compare the experience (including autonomy and satisfaction) and design priorities of users of transfemoral prostheses with versus without microprocessor-controlled knee units (MPKs and NMPKs, respectively), with a subsequent analyses of cross-category correlation, principal component analysis (PCA), cost-sensitivity segmentation, and unsupervised K-means clustering applied within the most cost-sensitive participants, to identify functional groupings of users with respect to their design priorities. The cohort featured predominantly younger (
ISSN:1743-0003
1743-0003
DOI:10.1186/s12984-021-00944-x