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The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis

Globally an estimated 22.3 million people live with upper-limb amputations. To mitigate the effects of upper-limb loss on completing activities of daily living (ADLs), amputees are prescribed upper-limb prostheses. In lower to middle-income countries (LVIICs), upper-limb amputees arc generally limit...

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Main Author: Bardien, Moegammad Ameen
Other Authors: Sivarasu, Sudesh
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Biomedical Engineering 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Bardien, Moegammad Ameen
author2 Sivarasu, Sudesh
author_browse Bardien, Moegammad Ameen
Sivarasu, Sudesh
author_facet Sivarasu, Sudesh
Bardien, Moegammad Ameen
author_sort Bardien, Moegammad Ameen
collection Thesis
description Globally an estimated 22.3 million people live with upper-limb amputations. To mitigate the effects of upper-limb loss on completing activities of daily living (ADLs), amputees are prescribed upper-limb prostheses. In lower to middle-income countries (LVIICs), upper-limb amputees arc generally limited to the use of body-driven prostheses. Yet users of body-driven prostheses often abandon their prostheses due to the overexertion of their shoulder and a lack of features that amputees find useful for completing ADLs such as wrist pronation and supination. The aim of this study was thus to design an electromechanical hand prosthesis that meets the functional and grasping requirements of prosthesis users. To this end, the Self-Actuated Tenim Hand (SATH), a functional electromechanically actuated prosthesis, was developed. The SATH, based on the novel body-driven Tenim Hand, incorporated design refinements that improved on its predecessor's grasping capabilities. An electromechanical actuator and a wrist supination and pronation mechanism were integrated into the SATH thereby improving its functional capabilities. The actuator is controlled by a simple yet robust trigger mechanism that allows the user to induce flexion or extension of the hand. The Anthropomorphic Hand Assessment Protocol (AHAP) was used as a design validation tool to assess the functional capabilities of the SATH. AHAP measures the grasping ability score (GAS) and partial GASs of hand prostheses where the scores represent a percentage of healthy limb function overall and in the individual grasp types assessed by AHAP respectively. The SATH scored an overall GAS of 75% and scored above 50% for every partial GAS measurement and above 75r;r for five of the eight grasp types and both non-grasping tasks. These results were comparable to scores obtained by a more advanced prosthesis. Generally, the SATH performed satisfactorily in AHAP and with some minor modifications to address the lower partial GAS scores will be ready for clinical validation in an upper-limb amputee population.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:15.376Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Division of Biomedical Engineering
publisherStr Division of Biomedical Engineering
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35592 The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis Bardien, Moegammad Ameen Sivarasu, Sudesh Biomedical Engineering Globally an estimated 22.3 million people live with upper-limb amputations. To mitigate the effects of upper-limb loss on completing activities of daily living (ADLs), amputees are prescribed upper-limb prostheses. In lower to middle-income countries (LVIICs), upper-limb amputees arc generally limited to the use of body-driven prostheses. Yet users of body-driven prostheses often abandon their prostheses due to the overexertion of their shoulder and a lack of features that amputees find useful for completing ADLs such as wrist pronation and supination. The aim of this study was thus to design an electromechanical hand prosthesis that meets the functional and grasping requirements of prosthesis users. To this end, the Self-Actuated Tenim Hand (SATH), a functional electromechanically actuated prosthesis, was developed. The SATH, based on the novel body-driven Tenim Hand, incorporated design refinements that improved on its predecessor's grasping capabilities. An electromechanical actuator and a wrist supination and pronation mechanism were integrated into the SATH thereby improving its functional capabilities. The actuator is controlled by a simple yet robust trigger mechanism that allows the user to induce flexion or extension of the hand. The Anthropomorphic Hand Assessment Protocol (AHAP) was used as a design validation tool to assess the functional capabilities of the SATH. AHAP measures the grasping ability score (GAS) and partial GASs of hand prostheses where the scores represent a percentage of healthy limb function overall and in the individual grasp types assessed by AHAP respectively. The SATH scored an overall GAS of 75% and scored above 50% for every partial GAS measurement and above 75r;r for five of the eight grasp types and both non-grasping tasks. These results were comparable to scores obtained by a more advanced prosthesis. Generally, the SATH performed satisfactorily in AHAP and with some minor modifications to address the lower partial GAS scores will be ready for clinical validation in an upper-limb amputee population. 2022-01-27T06:53:26Z 2022-01-27T06:53:26Z 2021 2022-01-27T06:51:44Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35592 eng application/pdf Division of Biomedical Engineering Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Biomedical Engineering
Bardien, Moegammad Ameen
The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis
title_full The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis
title_fullStr The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis
title_full_unstemmed The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis
title_short The design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a Novel 3D printed functional hand prosthesis
title_sort design and development of an electromechanical adaptation for a novel 3d printed functional hand prosthesis
topic Biomedical Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35592
work_keys_str_mv AT bardienmoegammadameen thedesignanddevelopmentofanelectromechanicaladaptationforanovel3dprintedfunctionalhandprosthesis
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