Arm Prosthetic
By Nico, Gabe, Bradley
Enabling the unabled
Many things cause paralysis
In every group of 100 people, two will be paralyzed. This can be caused by many things some of which are:
- The autoimmune diseases
- Stroke patients
- Cerebral Palsy
- Physical accidents
- and much more
Nico's Grandfather
My grandfather has an autoimmune disease called MS.
It is your autoimmune system attacking your nerves which leads to paralysis, speech difficulty, and vision problems.
A few years ago, I had a school project to make something to help people with medical disabilities. I decided to make an arm prosthetic to give back functionality to his arm and hand. It broke in half. Ever since that project, I have wanted to do a better version of this project, and OI was the perfect opportunity.
Weighted VR
During the start of this summer I brainstormed many ideas. There was one that I really wanted to continue which was creating weight in VR.
I forgot about the idea until the end. I decided to start working on it. I made multiple sketches and decided I would make an exoskeleton that would go against the human body.
While this had a different use case it was the same mechanics!
Arm Prosthetic brings movement to the arm
This project helps people with arm paralysis regain movement and grip. We aim to let them move their arms from the elbow and hold objects with their hands, restoring a sense of independence and confidence in daily life.
Being able to move and grip again helps people feel more in control, boosting their confidence and improving their quality of life.
There were many different hand protoypes
An array of these would vaguely look and function like a hand
This is a prototype of a soft grabber that lifts a variety of things
This mechanism is meant to grab onto bottle caps and other circular objects.
The elbow joint got moved to the shoulder
We want your feedback
Is there anything you think we should take into account?
Is there anything we should add to help the use case?
How would you do the mechanisms.
Thank You!
By Nico, Gabe, Bradley
Enabling the unabled