Published:
New Data Support Experts' Opinion that Prostheses Do Not Enhance Top Running Speeds of Amputee Sprinters; Findings Published Today in Biology Letters
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - New data released by a team of experts provide further evidence that
amputees using running-specific prostheses have no overall biomechanical
advantages when running at top speeds compared to able-bodied sprinters.
These findings were published today in Biology Letters, a journal
of the Royal Society of London.
The paper's six authors are leading experts in the fields of
biomechanics and physiology, and include members of the research team
whose previous findings were presented to the Court of Arbitration for
Sport (CAS) in Lausanne, Switzerland in April 2008. Those previous
findings were instrumental in reversing the International Association of
Athletics Federations' (IAAF) ban of Oscar Pistorius, the South African
bilateral amputee who attempted to qualify for the 400-meter sprint at
the Beijing Olympics. Pistorius runs using J-shaped, high-performance
Cheetah Flex-Foot prostheses.
In the new study, the researchers gathered biomechanical data from six
elite, unilateral amputee sprinters using running-specific prostheses.
(Unilateral sprinters have one lower-leg prosthesis and one biological
leg.) Data were analyzed from jogging speeds up to top sprinting speeds
on a unique high-speed instrumented treadmill at the Orthopedic
Specialty Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. The scientists compared the
forces exerted on the ground and step timing from the biological leg to
the leg with the prosthesis. The results showed that the primary
determinant of top speed, the force applied to the ground, was 9 percent
less in the leg with the prosthesis. They also found that the time
required for leg swing was not different between legs, and was similar
to non-amputee sprinters. The researchers therefore concluded that while
a running-specific prosthesis can partly emulate the spring-like
behavior of a biological leg, unilateral amputees cannot generate and
apply as much force with their prosthesis, thus impairing top speed.
"These new data support our previous findings that passive
running-specific prostheses are not able to provide the ground forces
realized by biological legs, and that we are not yet at a point in time
when lower-limb prostheses outperform biological limbs. But because the
biomechanical and physiological comparisons of amputee runners using
prostheses to non-amputee runners are so complex, we will continue
conducting additional research to better understand all the factors
involved," says lead author Alena Grabowski, of the MIT Media Lab's
Biomechatronics group.
"Our new data clearly show a ground-force deficiency caused by
running-specific prostheses," says Hugh Herr, senior author and head of
the Biomechatronics group. "Unilateral amputee sprinters simply cannot
strike the ground as hard and fast with their prosthetic leg as compared
to their biological leg, a clear disadvantage for achieving top
sprinting speeds."
The other four authors are: Craig McGowan, University of Texas at
Austin, Neuromuscular Biomechanics Laboratory; William McDermott, The
Orthopedic Specialty Hospital; and Matthew Beale and Rodger Kram,
University of Colorado at Boulder Locomotion Laboratory. Grabowski,
McGowan, Kram, and Herr were among the seven experts whose work was
presented at the CAS hearing last year.
The full Biology Letters paper, "Running-Specific Prostheses
Limit Ground-Force During Sprinting" can be read at the publication's
Web site: http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/firstcite
MIT Media Lab
Alexandra Kahn, 617-253-0365
akahn@media.mit.edu
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