This application claims priority to Taiwan Application Serial Number 106116006, filed May 15, 2017, which is herein incorporated by reference.
The present disclosure relates to an artificial joint, and more particularly, to the artificial joint for knee replacement.
It is now well-understood that human knee motion does not occur in a single plane. Prosthesis designs that restrict knee motion to a single plane (e.g., by implementing a single pin joint or a planar polycentric joint for the knee) will result in the user exhibiting an unnatural gait to compensate for the unnatural prosthetic knee motion.
In recent years, a design method was presented by D'Alessio et al. for a prosthetic knee that replicates the natural spatial motion of the human knee (D'Alessio J., Russell K., Lee W. and Sodhi R. S., “On the Application of RRSS Motion Generation and RRSS Axode Generation for the Design of a Concept Prosthetic Knee,” Mechanics Based Design of Structures and Machines, (in press).). With this method, the fixed and moving axodes for a spatial RRSS (Revolute-Revolute-Spherical-Spherical) linkage that approximates a group of prescribed tibial positions over knee flexion are generated. Because the spatial RRSS axodes for simulating the natural knee motion are noncircular, the engaging structures adopted in the prosthetic knee designed by the foregoing method are also noncircular.
However, there is in theory an indefinite number of possible designs for noncircular engaging structures and no general fabrication method, so in terms of design and manufacturing often face enormous challenges.
An aspect of the disclosure is to provide an artificial joint which can replicate natural spatial motions of human knees and be easily designed and manufactured.
According to an embodiment of the disclosure, an artificial joint includes a first engagement structure, a first connecting member, a second engagement structure, and a second connecting member. The first engagement structure has an external gear. The first connecting member is connected to the first engagement structure and configured to connect a femur. The second engagement structure has an internal gear. The external gear and the internal gear are meshed with each other respectively based on a first pitch circle and a second pitch circle. The first pitch circle is greater than the second pitch circle. A center of the second pitch circle is located within the first pitch circle. The second connecting member is connected to the second engagement structure and configured to connect a tibia.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the second engagement structure is at least a part of a circular gear.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the artificial joint further includes a shaft and a guiding structure. The shaft is connected to the second engagement structure and passes through the center of the second pitch circle. The guiding structure is connected to the first engagement structure and has at least one arcuate guide groove. The shaft is slidably engaged with the at least one arcuate guide groove.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the shaft is pivotally connected to the second engagement structure.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, a number of the at least one arcuate guide groove is two. The arcuate guide grooves are symmetrically located at two sides of the second engagement structure. The shaft is extended outwards from the sides of the second engagement structure and slidably engaged between the arcuate guide grooves.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, two ends of the shaft respectively pass through the arcuate guide grooves. The artificial joint further includes two retaining members respectively connected to the ends of the shaft. The guiding structure is retained between the retaining members.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, at least one of the retaining members is detachably connected to the shaft.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the at least one arcuate guide groove has a centerline. The centerline is at least a part of a circle.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, a center of the first pitch circle coincides with a curvature center of the centerline in a direction parallel to the shaft.
Accordingly, in the artificial joint of the present disclosure, the external gear and the internal gear of the two engagement structures are meshed with each other respectively based on the two pitch circles. That is, the designs and manufacturing of the engagement structures are similar to those of two circular gears. Therefore, the artificial joint of the present disclosure not only can achieve the purpose of replicating natural spatial motions of human knees, but also has the advantages of being easily designed and manufactured.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are by examples, and are intended to provide further explanation of the disclosure as claimed.
The disclosure can be more fully understood by reading the following detailed description of the embodiment, with reference made to the accompanying drawings as follows:
Reference will now be made in detail to the present embodiments of the disclosure, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers are used in the drawings and the description to refer to the same or like parts.
Reference is made to
As shown in
With the foregoing structural configurations, the second engagement structure 130 can roll on the first engagement structure 110 (by rolling the internal gear 131 on the external gear 111). Hence, the artificial joint 100 of the present embodiment is not a design of prosthetic knee limiting the motions of the tibia 300′ relative to the femur 200′ in a single plane, so as to achieve the purpose of replicating natural spatial motions of human knees.
Furthermore, the external gear 111 and the internal gear 131 meshed with each other respectively based on the first pitch circle CP1 and the second pitch circle CP2 represents that the designs and manufacturing of the first engagement structure 110 and the second engagement structure 130 are similar to those of two circular gears, so that the first engagement structure 110 and the second engagement structure 130 can be easily designed and manufactured than conventional noncircular engagement structures.
In the embodiment, the second engagement structure 130 is at least a part of a circular gear, but the disclosure is not limited in this regard. In some embodiments, the second engagement structure 130 can be a complete circular gear.
In the embodiment, the artificial joint 100 further includes a shaft 150 and a guiding structure 160. The shaft 150 is connected to the second engagement structure 130 and passes through the center C2 of the second pitch circle CP2. That is, the second engagement structure 130 rotates with the shaft 150 as the rotation center. The guiding structure 160 is connected to the first engagement structure 110 and has two arcuate guide grooves 161 (only exemplarily labelling one in each of
With reference to
In the embodiment, the shaft 150 passes through and is pivotally connected to the second engagement structure 130. Therefore, when assembling, the shaft 150 can sequentially pass through one of the arcuate guide grooves 161 of the guiding structure 160, the second engagement structure 130, and another of the arcuate guide grooves 161, so as to maintain the meshing state between the external gear 111 and the internal gear 131.
Furthermore, in the embodiment, two ends of the shaft 150 respectively pass through the arcuate guide grooves 161. The artificial joint 100 further includes two retaining members 170. The retaining members 170 are respectively connected to the ends of the shaft 150. The retaining members 170 are configured to retain the guiding structure 160 therebetween, so as to prevent the shaft 150 from leaving the arcuate guide grooves 161.
In the embodiment, one of the retaining members 170 is detachably connected to one end of the shaft 150. Therefore, when assembling, said one end of the shaft 150 can pass through the guiding structure 160 and the second engagement structure 130, and then be connected to said one of the retaining members 170 to finish the assembling process. However, the disclosure is not limited in this regard. In practical applications, two of the retaining members 170 can be detachably connected to the shaft 150.
Reference is made to
In step S101, tibial motion data is acquired. Reference is made to
In step S102, a RRSS (Revolute-Revolute-Spherical-Spherical) motion generation model is established.
In step S103, a RRSS axode generation model is established.
Reference is made to
The coordinates shown in Table 3 can be perfectly replicated by rolling a moving axode MA onto a fixed axode FA of the synthesized RRSS linkage.
In step S104, a pitch circle model is fitted. It should be pointed out that the RRSS motion generation model is a constrained nonlinear optimization model with 18 unknown dimension variables. Because the solution space for this model has an indefinite number of local minimums and the local minimum calculated is heavily dependent on the initial values specified for each of the model's 18 unknown dimension variables, synthesizing an RRSS motion generator that achieves prescribed positions and also produces circular axodes is extremely challenging.
In an embodiment, to determine the centers and radii of gear pitch circles to replace the noncircular axodes produced by the synthesized RRSS linkage, the method of least squares was employed in this work. The method of least squares satisfies the following Equation (1):
In which (xi, yi) represent points of the fixed axode FA and the moving axode MA of the synthesized RRSS linkage on plane X′-Y′ shown in
In step S105, the artificial joint 100 is manufactured. After the first pitch circle CP1 and the second pitch circle CP2 are calculated, the first engagement structure 110 having the external gear 111 and the second engagement structure 130 having the internal gear 131 can be easily manufactured in a manner similar to the case of manufacturing circular gears.
Reference is made to
By comparing the data in Table 1 and the data in Table 4, it can be clearly seen that the scalar differences between the coordinates of the points p3, q3, and r3 on the tibia 300′ shown in
It should be pointed out that the artificial joint of present disclosure is not limited to be manufactured by using the design and manufacturing flow chart of
According to the foregoing recitations of the embodiments of the disclosure, it can be seen that in the artificial joint of the present disclosure, the external gear and the internal gear of the two engagement structures are meshed with each other respectively based on the two pitch circles. That is, the designs and manufacturing of the engagement structures are similar to those of two circular gears. Therefore, the artificial joint of the present disclosure not only can achieve the purpose of replicating natural spatial motions of human knees, but also has the advantages of being easily designed and manufactured.
Although the present disclosure has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain embodiments thereof, other embodiments are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the embodiments contained herein.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the structure of the present disclosure without departing from the scope or spirit of the disclosure. In view of the foregoing, it is intended that the present disclosure cover modifications and variations of this disclosure provided they fall within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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106116006 | May 2017 | TW | national |