Tuesday 30 August 2016

A Prosthetic Foot that lets disabled wear heels

                Researchers have developed the first non-custom prosthetic foot to help women who have lost a leg to disease or injury, adapt heels up to four inches high. Women adjusting to life with a prosthetic limb face the same challenges as men, with perhaps one added complication: how to wear high-heels.
                A team of researchers has developed ‘Prominence’, the first prosthetic foot on the market that is nor custom made that adapts to popular fashion for heels up to four inches high. High heels have become an integral part of the female lifestyle in modern society, permeating through all aspects of life – professional and social. Scores of prosthetic feet are available on the market, but most are built to fit men’s shoes and none can adjust to a heel more than two inches high. That is less than the average women’s heel height in the US.
                With some 2,100 American women who lost a leg or foot in military service, and more women entering combat assignments, the demand for a prosthesis that accommodates women’s fashion footwear is sure to grow, researchers said.
                The challenge was creating a foot that adjusts without a separate tool to a range of heel heights, holds position without slipping, supports up to 113 kg, weighs less than over 1kg  and is slender enough to accommodate a woman’s shoe. The researchers’ work unfolded as a mix of mathematical calculations on paper and trial and error involving tests by machines and people.

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