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   Patient specific ankle-foot orthoses using rapid prototyping  
   
نویسنده mavroidis c. ,ranky r.g. ,sivak m.l. ,patritti b.l. ,dipisa j. ,caddle a. ,gilhooly k. ,govoni l. ,sivak s. ,lancia m. ,drillio r. ,bonato p.
منبع journal of neuroengineering and rehabilitation - 2011 - دوره : 8 - شماره : 1
چکیده    Background: prefabricated orthotic devices are currently designed to fit a range of patients and therefore they do not provide individualized comfort and function. custom-fit orthoses are superior to prefabricated orthotic devices from both of the above-mentioned standpoints. however,creating a custom-fit orthosis is a laborious and time-intensive manual process performed by skilled orthotists. besides,adjustments made to both prefabricated and custom-fit orthoses are carried out in a qualitative manner. so both comfort and function can potentially suffer considerably. a computerized technique for fabricating patient-specific orthotic devices has the potential to provide excellent comfort and allow for changes in the standard design to meet the specific needs of each patient. methods: in this paper,3d laser scanning is combined with rapid prototyping to create patient-specific orthoses. a novel process was engineered to utilize patient-specific surface data of the patient anatomy as a digital input,manipulate the surface data to an optimal form using computer aided design (cad) software,and then download the digital output from the cad software to a rapid prototyping machine for fabrication. results: two afos were rapidly prototyped to demonstrate the proposed process. gait analysis data of a subject wearing the afos indicated that the rapid prototyped afos performed comparably to the prefabricated polypropylene design. conclusions: the rapidly prototyped orthoses fabricated in this study provided good fit of the subject's anatomy compared to a prefabricated afo while delivering comparable function (i.e. mechanical effect on the biomechanics of gait). the rapid fabrication capability is of interest because it has potential for decreasing fabrication time and cost especially when a replacement of the orthosis is required. © 2011 mavroidis et al; licensee biomed central ltd.
آدرس department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, department of physical medicine and rehabilitation,harvard medical school,spaulding rehabilitation hospital,125 nashua street,boston,ma 02114, United States, department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, department of mechanical and industrial engineering,northeastern university,360 huntington avenue,boston,ma 02115, United States, polymesh llc,163 waterman street,providence,ri 02906-3109, United States, iam orthotics and prosthetics,inc.,400 west cummings park,woburn,ma 01801, United States, department of physical medicine and rehabilitation,harvard medical school,spaulding rehabilitation hospital,125 nashua street,boston,ma 02114,united states,harvard-mit division of health sciences and technology,77 massachusetts ave.,cambridge,ma 02139, United States
 
     
   
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