Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10434964 | Medical Engineering & Physics | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The plantar soft tissue is a highly functional viscoelastic structure involved in transferring load to the human body during walking. A Soft Tissue Response Imaging Device was developed to apply a vertical compression to the plantar soft tissue whilst measuring the mechanical response via a combined load cell and ultrasound imaging arrangement. Accuracy of motion compared to input profiles; validation of the response measured for standard materials in compression; variability of force and displacement measures for consecutive compressive cycles; and implementation in vivo with five healthy participants. Static displacement displayed average error of 0.04Â mm (range of 15Â mm), and static load displayed average error of 0.15Â N (range of 250Â N). Validation tests showed acceptable agreement compared to a Houndsfield tensometer for both displacement (CMCÂ >Â 0.99 RMSEÂ >Â 0.18Â mm) and load (CMCÂ >Â 0.95 RMSEÂ <Â 4.86Â N). Device motion was highly repeatable for bench-top tests (ICCÂ =Â 0.99) and participant trials (CMCÂ =Â 1.00). Soft tissue response was found repeatable for intra (CMCÂ >Â 0.98) and inter trials (CMCÂ >Â 0.70). The device has been shown to be capable of implementing complex loading patterns similar to gait, and of capturing the compressive response of the plantar soft tissue for a range of loading conditions in vivo.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Authors
D. Parker, G. Cooper, S. Pearson, G. Crofts, D. Howard, P. Busby, C. Nester,