US-12622792-B2 - Prosthetic wrist
Abstract
A prosthetic wrist for terminal devices preserves free rotation under high rotational or axial loads.
Inventors
- Manuel Reyes
Assignees
- Manuel Reyes
Dates
- Publication Date
- 20260512
- Application Date
- 20210709
Claims (3)
- 1 . A prosthetic wrist comprising: a thrust bearing; and a locking ring gear having a bottom surface and a top surface; and said thrust bearing rotationally engaged with said bottom surface of said locking ring gear; and a tapered bearing having an inner race and an outer race, engaged with said top surface of said locking ring gear; and a spindle rotationally engaged with said tapered-bearing inner race; and a housing rotationally engaged with said tapered-bearing outer race; and at least one interference mechanism configured to lock said locking ring gear in a radial position; wherein a prosthetic terminal device fitted into said spindle may be rotated under load while said interference mechanism is not engaged with said locking ring gear, and is held in a fixed radial position when said interference mechanism is engaged with said locking ring gear.
- 2 . The prosthetic wrist of claim 1 further comprising: at least one spring engaged with said at least one interference mechanism; and a linkage movably engaged with said interference mechanism, configured to move said interference mechanism against said at least one spring to engage with said locking ring gear; wherein movement of said linkage in a first direction, allows said at least one spring to elongate and disengage said at least one interference mechanism from said locking ring gear, thus allowing rotation of said spindle under load; and moving said linkage in a second direction compresses said at least one spring, engaging said at least one interference mechanism with said locking ring gear, locking rotation of said spindle.
- 3 . A prosthetic wrist comprising: a first housing portion rotationally engaged with a thrust bearing; and a locking ring gear having a bottom surface and a top surface; and said thrust bearing rotationally engaged with said bottom surface of said locking ring gear; and a tapered bearing having an inner race and an outer race, engaged with said top surface of said locking ring gear; and a spindle rotationally engaged with said tapered bearing inner race and fixedly engaged with said locking ring gear; and a second housing portion rotationally engaged with said tapered bearing outer race; and said first housing portion and said second housing portion fixedly engaged; and at least one interference mechanism; and at least one spring engaged with said at least one interference mechanism; and a linkage movable in at least a first direction and a second direction, and movably engaged with said interference mechanism, configured to move said interference mechanism against said at least one spring to engage with said locking ring gear; and an adapter having a receiving end and a keyed end; and said spindle configured to receive said keyed end of said adapter; and said adapter receiving end configured to receive a prosthetic hand; wherein the prosthetic hand fitted into said adapter and said spindle may be rotated under load while said interference mechanism is not engaged with said locking ring gear, and is held in a fixed radial position when said interference mechanism is engaged with said locking ring gear.
Description
This application is a continuation in part of application Ser. No. 16/029,925 filed 2018 Jul. 9. TECHNICAL FIELD The present disclosure relates to upper limb prosthetic devices used for maneuvering under load. BACKGROUND A prosthesis is any artificial device that replaces a body part. The fit of a prosthetic device accommodates the nature of the activity, the level of muscle strain, and user perspiration. Energy storage and return is a design consideration that affects the impact on the device and the response from the device to the impact. Utility, weight, and durability of the components affects the comfort and performance of a prosthesis. A prosthetic socket is a customized prosthetic interface suspended to a residual limb of an amputee. Prosthetic sockets are typically semi-rigid, composite forms constructed with a number of components engaged along a central axis. These integrated components may include suspension methods, elbow, wrist, knee, and ankle units, and use-specific terminal devices. Pronation and supination describe the rotation of the forearm to move the hand into a palm-up (pronation) or palm-down (supination) position. Internal and external rotation is the rotation of the arm at the shoulder or leg at the pelvis. Internal and external rotation at these joints rotates all of the distal extremities relative to the torso. Pronation, supination and internal and external rotation, whether intentional or unintentional, are important design considerations for prosthetic-limb devices. A mechanical wrist unit is one of the distal components of an upper limb prosthetic socket. The wrist unit enables secure attachment, removal and re-attachment of various terminal devices. The wrist unit designs have two modes: free-rotation mode and rotation-locked mode. In locked mode, certain features allow specificity of angular positioning of the terminal device. Current designs of mechanical wrist units have a tendency to bind under high rotational or axial load when in free-rotation mode. A terminal device is a prosthetic device that enables various specialized tasks. The terminal device attaches to a mechanical wrist unit. Terminal devices typically have a threaded stud that threads into an adapter. The adapter is dependent on the design of the wrist unit. SUMMARY A mechanical wrist unit is designed to be laminated into a prosthetic socket. An adapter has been designed for securing any terminal device with a standard sized threaded stud to the wrist unit. The mechanical wrist unit is designed for full, free rotation of the terminal device secured to the wrist unit, under all realistic load cases, and fine angular specificity at which the rotation can be locked. A combination thrust bearing and tapered bearing enables the free rotation under high load as desired. Other objects and features will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. Drawings are designed to illustrate rather than define the limits of the invention. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS To assist those of skill in the art in making and using the disclosed prosthesis and associated methods, reference is made to the accompanying figures, wherein: FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an example embodiment; FIG. 2 is an exploded view of the example embodiment of FIG. 1; FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the example embodiment of FIG. 1, shown in rotation-locked position. FIG. 4a is a perspective view with some components removed, showing the function of the locking twist ring; FIG. 4b is another perspective view with some components removed, showing the function of the locking twist ring; FIG. 5 is a perspective view of an example adapter and spindle. DESCRIPTION FIG. 1 shows a wrist unit 100 that is an apparatus for engaging prosthetic-terminal devices which are affixed to an adapter 111 at the distal end of the apparatus. The adapter 111 is held by an adapter collet 110 to components contained within the upper housing 114 and lower housing 136 (FIG. 2) which support bi-directional, axial loading as well as side loading, while rotating the prosthetic about axis 109. A twist ring 116 locks and unlocks the rotation of the adapter 111 so that a prosthetic device threaded into the adapter may rotate freely under load, or may be locked into position while under load. Grooves 138 (FIG. 1), at the proximal end of the apparatus increase adhesion when laminated into a composite prosthetic socket. FIG. 2 shows an exploded view of the wrist unit 100. FIG. 3 shows a cross-sectional view thereof. Referring to FIG. 2 and FIG. 3, an adapter 111 is affixed to a spindle 124 by way of an adapter collet 110. The adapter 111 has a key 112 that engages with a keyway 125 (FIG. 5) in the spindle 124. The adapter collet 110 seats the adapter 111 in the spindle 124 with the key 112 aligned with the keyway 125. An upper housing 114 is affixed by fasteners to a lower housing 136 to contain the components.