Premodified casting for the Patellar-Tendon-Bearing prosthesis.
نویسندگان
چکیده
1 This work was supported in part by Veterans Administration Contract V663P-505. 2 Director, Prosthetics Research Study, Seattle, Wash. 3 Consultant, Rehabilitation Engineering, Social and Rehabilitation Service, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Washington, D.C. Methods for producing a functional, comfortable, and well-fitting patellartendon-bearing prosthesis have been the subject of considerable discussion, and in fact some controversy, since the prosthesis was first introduced several years ago. Prosthetists use a variety of techniques to cast below-knee stumps, and there is an extensive literature on the subject, not excluding the technicians' differing viewpoints. There is agreement, however, that the effectiveness of the prosthesis depends to a great extent upon how well the wrapcast (negative) was taken and, subsequently, how precisely the male plaster mold (positive) was modified. The positive mold is modified in order to relieve pressure-sensitive areas by the addition of build-ups, and to increase the pressure to the pressure-tolerant (or natural weight-bearing) areas of the stump by the judicious removal of small amounts of plaster. These alterations prevent vertical displacement during stance and provide for comfortable accommodation of the stump during full weight-bearing. The precise amount of plaster removed varies with the individual patient, depending upon the muscle tone and the amount and resilience of the subcutaneous tissue. The procedure is by no means a difficult one, but timing is a complicating factor. Authorities on the subject encourage immediate rather than later modification of the positive cast in order to prevent improper interpretation of the individual stump characteristics. Consequently, the well-qualified prosthetist who finds himself with a large number of plaster positives to be modified, or the less experienced prosthetist who is just developing a keen sense of technical judgment, is at a disadvantage because, even with the best memory and with detailed prosthetic information, he is limited by techniques which involve nothing more than intelligent guesswork and which are conducive to at least an occasional error, regardless of the individual's experience and skill. This difficulty can be overcome by modifying the cast on the patient's stump when the negative-cast impression for the permanent prosthesis is taken. This paper describes such a procedure, essentially initial socket fitting during casting, which provides a plaster negative-positive that requires only a final smoothing to be ready for socket lamination. The method includes the application of felt pads to strategic areas of the stump. Elastic plaster bandage is used for the negative plaster wrap because it effectively conforms to the irregular stump surfaces, controls tissue compression and displacement, and yields a precise stump impression. The resulting positive plaster mold resembles the stump contours accurately, thus providing the basis for a comfortable, well-fitting, and functionally acceptable PTB prothesis. Provision of a total-contact, hard PTB socket, without a soft end or the customary insert, is the standard procedure at the Artificial Limbs. Vol 1 5, No l .pp 1-14, Spring 1971
منابع مشابه
The PTB Supracondylar-Suprapatellar Air-Cushion Socket
The patallar-tendon-bearing supracondy lar, suprapatellar air cushion (PTS-AC) below-knee (BK) prosthesis is a special modi fication of the supracondylar, suprapatellar suspension and the air cusion socket. The air cushion principle in combination with the patella tendon-bearing (PTB) prosthesis was introduced by Lyquist, Wilson, and Radcliffe (Fig. 1), (2) in 1965. It requires more accurate ...
متن کاملThe Army Medical Biomechanical Research Laboratory porous laminate patellar-tendon-bearing prosthesis.
1 Based upon The AMBRL Porous Laminate Patellar Tendon-Bearing Prosthesis, published by Prosthetics and Orthotics, New York University Post-Graduate Medical School, New York, NY. , in March 1968 (1). The study was conducted under the supervision of Sidney Fishman, Ph.D., Project Director, with financial support from a special grant from the Children's Bureau, Department of Health, Education, an...
متن کاملThe evolution of functional bracing of fractures.
©2006 British Editorial Society of Bone and Joint Surgery doi:10.1302/0301-620X.88B2. 16381 $2.00 J Bone Joint Surg [Br] 2006;88-B:141-8. Functional fracture bracing, described in 1967, 1 was inspired by the patellar-tendonbearing prosthesis which had recently been developed for below-knee amputees. This prosthesis had eliminated the traditional thigh corset and allowed the transfer of weight-b...
متن کاملDevelopment of Refined Fitting Procedures for Lower-extremity Prosthese
With the development of the patellar-tendon-bearing prosthesis by the University of California at Berkeley, many new advantages in simplicity, comfort, and function were available to the below-knee amputee. However, there still exists the problem of concentrated pressures over small areas of the stump. The original design of the patellar-tendonbearing prosthesis was intended to distribute the l...
متن کاملSeated-popliteal weight bearing prosthesis for a bilateral amputee.
Bilateral lower limb amputees suffer from a lack of stability when seated without prostheses due to lack of ground reaction forces through the stumps. In patients for whom ambulation is not a realistic goal, the seated-popliteal weight bearing prosthesis provides a solution for stability when seated in a wheelchair, without the problem of tibial pressure experienced with patellar-tendon-bearing...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Artificial limbs
دوره 15 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1971