Transtibial Prosthetics Flashcards
If you decrease the heel lever and increase the toe lever it results in…?
Greater stability
Places GRF anterior to the knee promoting knee extension
Socket adjustments to achieve decreased heel lever, increased toe lever
- socket extension (angular)
- socket posterior (linear)
- foot plantarflexed (angular)
- softer heel cushion/PF bumper during loading response
If you increase the heel lever and decrease the toe lever it results in…?
Greater mobility
Places GRF posterior to knee promoting knee flexion
Socket adjustments to increase heel lever, decrease toe lever
- socket flexion (angular)
- socket anterior (linear)
- foot DF (angular)
- stiffer heel cushion/PF bumper during loading response
Prosthetic “bench alignment”
-socket flexed forward 5 degrees and slightly adducted
Should pressure be uniform over the residual limb?
NO! It should be “total contact”, but pressure should not be uniform. The prosthetic should place pressure on areas that can handle it and relieve pressure from sensitive areas.
Why are transtibial sockets placed in 5 degrees of flexion?
This places loading onto the patellar ligament.
If a patient has poor knee control, how should the socket be positioned?
Extended or posteriorly
If a patient has strong quads and is very active how should the socket be positioned?
Flexed or anteriorly
How should you accomodate a knee flexion contracture?
Increase the socket flexion
Why is the prosthetic foot placed medial relative to the socket?
Provides more stability and offloads the fibular head
Why would you place a food in a more lateral position?
To increase the M/L stability during stance, BUT this increases pressure on the fibular head so BE CAREFUL!
GRF/anatomic causes/prosthetic causes of insufficient knee flexion
GRF - placed too far anterior causing excessive knee extension
Anatomic causes: anterodistal pain, weak quads, poor balance, extensor spasticity, contracture
Prosthetic causes: socket extended too much, socket too posterior, ankle too much PF, heel cushion too soft, suspension interferes with knee flexion
GRF/anatomical causes/prosthetic causes of excessive knee flexion (buckling)
GRF- too far posterior to knee joint causing excessive flexion
Anatomic: weak quads, knee flexion contracture
Prosthetic: socket too far anterior, socket too far flexed, foot too DF, heel cushion too rigid, prosthesis too long
Causes during late stance for excessive knee flexion/insufficient knee flexion
Same as for early stance, except in late stance issues with heel height and heel cushion do not apply