great stuff! any chance I could get a link to the paper you guys wrote up for this? I'm trying to do a similar project but I'm lost at figuring out how to control the pressure in the pam.
This was our capstone senior design project for Purdue's undergraduate BME program. The prosthetic limb was one of nine different projects developed in the fall 2009 semester, each of which addressed a relevant medical problem. These included an implantable pressure sensor for glaucoma, a CPAP device for preterm infants and an implantable wireless sensor and pump for automatic blood glucose regulation, to name a few.
That's incredible, I've always had a deep fascination with prosthetics. I can't say I know how "practical" they're in use as far as being any more advanced than a "peg-leg" or an automatic-push-off ankle design, which is in use for soldiers who've had to get amputated legs, etc. This is pretty impressive in your video for sure, I wanted to get into this, how difficult would it be to get into a program like this and come out pedigreed?
Thanks for the input! Injured soldiers were actually our target market for this project. Purdue's BME program is definitely challenging, but I think that's true of any engineering major. I'd highly recommend it.
There's been a question for YEARS I've been dying to have an answer to that's at least half-ass believable or full better yet. The Terminator movies so called "Endo-Skeleton" design, is the reason nobody's crafted any prosthesis after that is because of possible copyright infringement of any sort? I just had this idea about prosthesis, that if you were to make one, mimic the human body as anatomically correct as possible. Thanks for your time sblarsen12!!!! : ) I REALLY appreciate it all!!!!
No problem! I'm not entirely sure about the endoskeleton design, but I'd say it's most likely a technology limitation rather than a copyright infringement. Just my two cents.
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great stuff! any chance I could get a link to the paper you guys wrote up for this? I'm trying to do a similar project but I'm lost at figuring out how to control the pressure in the pam.
yyy70107 1 month ago
Comment removed
yyy70107 1 month ago
I know this sounds like a dumb question... but, do you have to know a lot of... (oh, God) MATH... in order to design/build prothetics?
(I hate that word... SO MUCH) XD
Kari166 1 year ago
you guys need to raise the patella height and laterally rotate the patella 5 degrees. itll make it more natural
russiaCANT 1 year ago
wow it actually makes the same sound as robocop! amazing
bishopdante 1 year ago
he's jake the peg de'dl'e'dl'um with his extra leg de'dl'e'dl'um
MusicalProspector 1 year ago
So you guy's are in college for designing prosthetics? Can anybody give me some info?
OmegaXIII 2 years ago
This was our capstone senior design project for Purdue's undergraduate BME program. The prosthetic limb was one of nine different projects developed in the fall 2009 semester, each of which addressed a relevant medical problem. These included an implantable pressure sensor for glaucoma, a CPAP device for preterm infants and an implantable wireless sensor and pump for automatic blood glucose regulation, to name a few.
sblarsen12 2 years ago
That's incredible, I've always had a deep fascination with prosthetics. I can't say I know how "practical" they're in use as far as being any more advanced than a "peg-leg" or an automatic-push-off ankle design, which is in use for soldiers who've had to get amputated legs, etc. This is pretty impressive in your video for sure, I wanted to get into this, how difficult would it be to get into a program like this and come out pedigreed?
OmegaXIII 2 years ago
Thanks for the input! Injured soldiers were actually our target market for this project. Purdue's BME program is definitely challenging, but I think that's true of any engineering major. I'd highly recommend it.
sblarsen12 2 years ago
There's been a question for YEARS I've been dying to have an answer to that's at least half-ass believable or full better yet. The Terminator movies so called "Endo-Skeleton" design, is the reason nobody's crafted any prosthesis after that is because of possible copyright infringement of any sort? I just had this idea about prosthesis, that if you were to make one, mimic the human body as anatomically correct as possible. Thanks for your time sblarsen12!!!! : ) I REALLY appreciate it all!!!!
OmegaXIII 2 years ago
No problem! I'm not entirely sure about the endoskeleton design, but I'd say it's most likely a technology limitation rather than a copyright infringement. Just my two cents.
sblarsen12 2 years ago
nicely done! congrats! you guys are wicked smaht. now, can you program it with a karate kick subroutine? :-)
desmondtdog 2 years ago
Great work guys !
rdbranaweera 2 years ago
this is amazing. Which school is this? MIT?
mspsys 2 years ago
Go DJ!
ceverhard 2 years ago
That is very cool. Looks like it worked well.
alisonvrb 2 years ago