A device for characterising the mechanical properties of the plantar soft tissue of the foot.

Dan Parker (Collaborator), Glen Cooper (Collaborator), Steve Pearson (Collaborator), Gillian Crofts (Collaborator), David Howard (Collaborator), Paul Busby (Collaborator), Chris Nester (Collaborator)

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    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 0.04 mm (range of 15 mm), and static load displayed average error of 0.15 N (range of 250 N). Validation tests showed acceptable agreement compared to a Houndsfield tensometer for both displacement (CMC > 0.99 RMSE > 0.18 mm) and load (CMC > 0.95 RMSE <4.86 N). Device motion was highly repeatable for bench-top tests (ICC = 0.99) and participant trials (CMC = 1.00). Soft tissue response was found repeatable for intra (CMC > 0.98) and inter trials (CMC > 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.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1098-1104
    Number of pages6
    JournalMedical engineering & physics
    Volume37
    Issue number11
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2015

    Keywords

    • Biomechanics
    • Dynamic testing
    • Foot
    • Gait simulation
    • Soft tissue mechanics
    • Ultrasound

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