ArXiv TLDR

Tensegrity crutches with compliance from a pre-stressed self-tensile module improve ground reaction force profiles, speed, effort, comfort, and perceived stability

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2605.02710

Jingxian Gu, Joanna Spyra, Andrew Walski, Lyla Elsaesser, Samuel Bierner + 1 more

cs.ROnlin.AO

TLDR

Tensegrity crutches, featuring a compliant self-tensile module, enhance ground reaction force profiles, speed, effort, comfort, and stability.

Key contributions

  • Designed biologically inspired tensegrity crutches with a pre-stressed self-tensile module for compliance.
  • Compared tensegrity, rigid, and spring-loaded crutches in mechanical tests and human trials (N=18).
  • Tensegrity design reduced peak loading rates and improved user effort, comfort, pain, and usability.
  • Maintained perceived stability and walking speed, unlike spring-loaded crutches which reduced them.

Why it matters

This paper introduces a novel crutch design that addresses limitations of existing rigid and spring-loaded models. By improving comfort, stability, and reducing injury risk, it offers a significant advancement in mobility aids. The biologically inspired design provides superior mechanical properties.

Original Abstract

Purpose: Six million people use crutches as mobile aids in the US. Rigid designs with no axial mobility limit sensory feedback and lead to secondary injury on the upper joints. Spring-loaded designs offer compliance but may compromise stability. We designed a biologically inspired tensegrity crutch with a compliant module aiming to achieve favorable mechanical properties. The terminal module was a pre-stressed self-tensile two-cell tensegrity structure. We compared the tensegrity crutch to commercial rigid and spring-loaded crutches in mechanical tests using axial loading, in overground straight and turning walking, and in participant experience. Methods: In human trials, healthy young adults (N=18) with no recent lower-body injury performed straight walking and turning trials at a comfortable self-selected pace. A knee blocker simulated unilateral injury of the dominant leg. After using each type of crutch, participants reported their perceived levels of effort, comfort, pain, stability, and usability. Results: Compared to the rigid design, both spring-loaded and tensegrity conditions reduced peak loading rates. The tensegrity design improved effort, comfort, pain, and usability. Spring-loaded crutches reduced perceived stability and walking speed. Conclusion: The biologically inspired tensegrity crutches were an overall improvement to existing designs. Simulations and mechanical testing suggest that nonlinear stiffness, ground-following, and force feedback are among the beneficial mechanical properties that underlie this improvement.

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