The Influence of 3D Printed Prostheses on Neural Activation Patterns

NARecruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

40

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

January 10, 2020

Primary Completion Date

August 31, 2026

Study Completion Date

August 31, 2026

Conditions
Amniotic Band SyndromeUpper Extremity Deformities, Congenital
Interventions
DEVICE

3D Printed Upper-limb Prosthesis

The fingers and thumb were made of polylactic acid polymer manufactured using industrial 3D printers. The palm, socket, forearm brace, and leveraging structure were made of polylactic acid which has properties similar to thermoplastic that facilitate post manufacturing adjustments. Elastic cords placed inside the dorsal aspect of the fingers provided passive finger extension. Finger flexion was driven by non-elastic cords along the palmar surface of each finger and was activated through 20-30 degrees of wrist or elbow flexion.

BEHAVIORAL

Home Intervention

An occupational therapy student will perform 3 home visits a week and will direct a training protocol that consists of completing three trials of a series of 6 block building activities (i.e., block-stacking) for each hand separated by 30 seconds of rest (a total of 18 block building activities per hand). The block stacking activity consists in building a 4 block train, 3 cube bridge, 4 block wall, 3 block tower, 6 block steps, and 6 block pyramid. All subjects including the control group will perform the same home training protocol.

Trial Locations (1)

68182

RECRUITING

University of Nebraska at Omaha, Omaha

All Listed Sponsors
lead

University of Nebraska

OTHER