scholarly journals Affordable 3D-printed tendon prosthetic hands: Expectations and benchmarking questioned

Author(s):  
Javier Andrés-Esperanza ◽  
Jose L. Iserte-Vilar ◽  
Immaculada Llop-Harillo ◽  
Antonio Pérez-González
Keyword(s):  
Data in Brief ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 104163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farah Alkhatib ◽  
John-John Cabibihan ◽  
Elsadig Mahdi
Keyword(s):  
Low Cost ◽  

Author(s):  
Juan Sebastian Cuellar ◽  
Gerwin Smit ◽  
Amir A Zadpoor ◽  
Paul Breedveld

In developing countries, prosthetic workshops are limited, difficult to reach, or even non-existent. Especially, fabrication of active, multi-articulated, and personalized hand prosthetic devices is often seen as a time-consuming and demanding process. An active prosthetic hand made through the fused deposition modelling technology and fully assembled right after the end of the 3D printing process will increase accessibility of prosthetic devices by reducing or bypassing the current manufacturing and post-processing steps. In this study, an approach for producing active hand prosthesis that could be fabricated fully assembled by fused deposition modelling technology is developed. By presenting a successful case of non-assembly 3D printing, this article defines a list of design considerations that should be followed in order to achieve fully functional non-assembly devices. Ten design considerations for additive manufacturing of non-assembly mechanisms have been proposed and a design case has been successfully addressed resulting in a fully functional prosthetic hand. The hand prosthesis can be 3D printed with an inexpensive fused deposition modelling machine and is capable of performing different types of grasping. The activation force required to start a pinch grasp, the energy required for closing, and the overall mass are significantly lower than body-powered commercial prosthetic hands. The results suggest that this non-assembly design may be a good alternative for amputees in developing countries.


Author(s):  
Alok Prakash ◽  
Shiru Sharma

Upper limb amputations seriously affect a patient's life by restricting their ability in performing various tasks. Prosthetic hands are considered the primary method to reinstate the lost capabilities of such amputees. However, the presently available prosthetic devices are unable to fulfill the requirements of users due to their excessively high cost, limited functionality, heavy weight, unnatural operation, and complexity. This article presents an affordable and simple control-based myoelectric hand for transradial amputees. The hand setup mainly consists of a self-designed surface electromyography (sEMG) sensor, a microcontroller unit and a five-fingered, intrinsically actuated 3D printed hand for dexterous operations. The developed hand was implemented with proportional control scheme and was successfully tested on five amputees (with missing lower forearms) for performing grasping activities of different objects. Further, the closing time and grip force at the fingertips were also determined for the hand to compare its performance with the commercially available hands.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (23) ◽  
pp. eaau5543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin W. O’Brien ◽  
Patricia A. Xu ◽  
David J. Levine ◽  
Cameron A. Aubin ◽  
Ho-Jung Yang ◽  
...  

The force, speed, dexterity, and compact size required of prosthetic hands present extreme design challenges for engineers. Current prosthetics rely on high-quality motors to achieve adequate precision, force, and speed in a small enough form factor with the trade-off of high cost. We present a simple, compact, and cost-effective continuously variable transmission produced via projection stereolithography. Our transmission, which we call an elastomeric passive transmission (EPT), is a polyurethane composite cylinder that autonomously adjusts its radius based on the tension in a wire spooled around it. We integrated six of these EPTs into a three-dimensionally printed soft prosthetic hand with six active degrees of freedom. Our EPTs provided the prosthetic hand with about three times increase in grip force without compromising flexion speed. This increased performance leads to finger closing speeds of ~0.5 seconds (average radial velocity, ~180 degrees second−1) and maximum fingertip forces of ~32 newtons per finger.


Author(s):  
Kyungho Nam ◽  
Christopher Crick
Keyword(s):  

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