DJ Hero Review
Nissan's LandGlider Narrow track vehicles - the convergence of the car and the motorcycle
Emue and Visa Europe have been working closely over the past 18 months to develop the Visa... Anti-fraud credit card features E-Ink display
SPDY from Google's Chromium development team has achieved 55 percent faster page loading t... Google SPDY aims to make web faster
BMW has brought back the C1 as an electric-powered concept scooter called the C1-E E is for electric: The BMW C1-E concept scooter
Yes, that's supposed to be a piece of underwear. No, me neither. C-string makes your average thong look like grannypants (NSFW)
MORE TOP STORIES »
HEALTH AND WELLBEING

A $20 prosthetic knee to bring relief to disadvantaged amputees

By David Greig

17:30 April 22, 2009 PDT

A superior, low-cost prosthetic knee joint, developed by Stanford’s JaipurKnee proje...

A superior, low-cost prosthetic knee joint, developed by Stanford’s JaipurKnee project team, is put through its paces, during prototype testing

An artificial knee costing just USD$20 promises to deliver much needed help to amputees who are disadvantaged or impoverished – particularly when the price of high-end titanium knee joints can range anywhere from USD$10,000 to USD$100,000 in the US. The artificial knee, dubbed the JaipurKnee, was developed by Joel Sadler, a lecturer in mechanical engineering and d'Arbeloff Fellow, and his team at the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford University.

Named after the JaipurFoot prosthetics charity, which worked with Sadler and his team, the prosthetic knee was designed by evaluating the mechanics of expensive titanium knee joints in the US as well as the substantially cheaper materials used in prosthetics in developing countries.

Based on these studies, the team came up with a versatile knee joint made from an oil-filled nylon polymer. Previously inexpensive prosthetic knee joints rotated on a single axis, like a door hinge. These proved to be unstable and unsafe on rough terrain and caused amputees considerable physical and mental pain. The mechanics of the self-lubricating JaipurKnee joint are different from other cheaper models and capable of rotating in more than one plane, which makes it more flexible and easier to walk on.

To date, some 43 joints have been fitted to amputees in India, where Sadler and his team are performing further tests to improve on the knee's design. The initial goal is to produce 100,000 joints over the next three years, with the hope that the cost can still be driven below USD$20.

The Jaipur Knee went on display recently at Stanford's annual Cool Product Expo.

Via Physorg.com via Stanford University

David Greig

User Comments (1)
 

Just a few years late. This has already been done.

http://www.legsresearch.org/projects/prosthetics/

comment

Jared Schad Poe

- November 14, 2009 @ 11:11 am CST

RSS Feed for comments from this article RSS Feed for comments from all articles
Post a Comment

Login with your gizmag account:




Or Login with Facebook:


Connect

Related Articles Email this article to a friend

Just enter your friends and your email address into the form below ...




Privacy is safe with us because we have a strict privacy policy.

Recent popular articles in Health and Wellbeing
Recent Comments