Ask Slashdot: What Would You Look For In a Prosthetic Hand?
Arglebarf writes "A family member is recovering from a serious illness and, unfortunately, the medication that saved her life will probably cost her hands and feet. She is an artist by trade, so this is a pretty big deal. Replacement prostheses might restore a degree of independence, as well as enabling her to continue with her creative passions. Do any Slashdotters have experience with replacement hands? What features do you look for? Do any models allow you tweak the software for fine tuning? Beyond the day-to-day uses, she will want something that can hold small objects precisely (e.g. a paintbrush)."
a cold beer!
For holding... uh... hammers, and other tube like things. Not too loose, definitely not too firm, and able to quickly move back and forth.
... I wish there was a tasteful way to make a Star Wars joke.
Artists always find a way of creating.
--- rapper/producer/bachelorette party stripper
A prosthetic bird
A grenade implanted in the palm, obviously.
If at all possible. It isn't too far fetched, hand and forearm transplants have been made, and have even achieved sensorial feedback.
I'd expect a prosthetic bird.
It's worth two in the prosthetic bush, after all.
-- I have monkeys in my pants.
Get in touch with this guy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AoRmlAZVTs
Dean Kamen, inventor of the Segway, has been working on much more functional prosthetics. He named his bionic arm "Luke", an obvious reference we can all appreciate. Demos of it look pretty amazing. Here's the official page for it: http://www.dekaresearch.com/deka_arm.shtml Also google "Kamen Luke Arm" and you find lots of pix, vids and articles about it.
Light cup, beer drink, thin so chain, neck turtle fat, man I won't say it again
and maybe a bottle opener
Lasers.
That's what I'd look for anyways...
A robotic hand is stronger than the paintbrush (or pen).
A sturdy socket, and a 3D printer. While highly dexterous neurally controlled arms and hands are in development, they're far from an off-the-shelf option. For specific uses (e.g. holding various artists tools) you may well be better off with some sort of magnetic socket on a stump cup, and a rack of special purpose end manipulators for each tool.
For paint brushes and other small items I imagine holding them in her mouth will work better than current prosthetic hands.
You may be thinking about the robotic hands you can see in research clips but most available prosthetics are simple devices that open and close with a turn of the forearm.
The robotic hands suffer from difficulty getting a "close/open hand" signal from the brain. Implanted electrodes are all to some degree incompatible with human tissue and degrade over time. Sensors to read electrical signals through the skin are imprecise. Some versions use buttons manipulated by other body parts (likely toes in this case) but these are not in the mainstream.
The old fashion two finger hooks seem to be the most practical answer for a lot of people. They are cheaper, durable, don't require batteries and can do a lot of useful things with any fine motor manipulation.
A human hand is a marvel of biological engineering. Sadly it is tough to replicate in a prosthetic. Perhaps she would be a good candidate for a transplant down the road? Prosthetics may improve more quickly with so many vets having suffered limb loss. To date lower limb prosethetics seem to be well ahead of hands/arms in terms of matching the original limb's functionality. Lots of "below the knee" single amputies have no obvious impairment in terms of gait.
Technology is moving very fast. State of the art today won't be in 5 year. I would want a system that I could disconnect the replacement part(s) and connect up new ones without surgery. This also allows for custom limbs for specific tasks. Holding a brush may be a custom limb. I may also want a custom chainsaw arm, too.
I want flexibility for change & all the specifications for the mating connector to my body to be open source or license/patent free so I can have custom limbs made. I want a copy of the specs for the same reason.
... will cost an arm and a leg.
I'll let you google it whenever you feel ready. Some people are more sensitive than others.
Mostly random stuff.
clock
alarm
flash drive
multiple tool fingertips (screwdrivers, torx, etc)
quick detach in case of emergency
tethering for extended gripping (hand still grips while detached, tether is strong enough to support X-hundred pounds, but still detachable under load)
spike knuckles
e-ink subdermal display
built in wifi
camera
cellular phone
smuggling compartment
brazing torch
built in stungun (not tazer)
dermal blade for cutting the ropes
fine manipulators/extensible micro-hand
breathalyzer (great for parties, just blow in the thumb!)
digital audio recorder
Think Bond, go nuts. Make them inexpensive and specialized for specific needs. Swap hands for different jobs. Just like you do with 2 human hands.
captcha: crochet ....touche Captcha, touche....
And fake money shot capabilities :)
I can't be the only one who's thinking it needs to support a Fleshlight attachment...
This prosthetic hand is for a woman, who is going to lose her hands. Are you fucking serious that this is the best thing you can think of to say?
Did I click the Ebaums bookmark?
laser beams.
THIS
funky49 has taken the high ground...
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
Can I fuck it?
In Soviet Russia, dot slashes YOU!
I may also want a custom chainsaw arm, too.
I think S-Mart sells those in the landscaping section.
The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
I would want Luke Skywalker's hand if I was unfortunate enough to lose a hand or two.
If funds are not an issue, look into this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Targeted_reinnervation
I like the way you're thinking.
I'd also stress to the surgeon that I would want to retain as much living tissue -- especially nerve and muscle tissue -- as possible, keeping in mind the potential for next-generation prostheses as well as breakthroughs regenerative medicine. The more healthy, natural tissue remaining, the better your chances, in terms of making use of future medical technology.
Think of sweep, and a few others as well.
Maybe you're not allowed to do all that you had in mind.
Contact Dean Kamen and ask about his Luke Robotic arm, it's a long shot as it was a DARPA funded ultra tech project, but you might be able to get somewhere if your family is rich.
but consider this : a replacement hand wil never give her back what she already had. It wil always feel worse compared to the original. It may be better to focus on what is left, than on what was lost. There's plenty of artists using mouth or feet in stead. Encourage her to exploit being different and do things differently.
Secondly remberer that all her skillz reside in her brain even after having lost the hand/limb. It may be more easy relocating those skillz to an other part of her natural body than trying to reenact things with an artificial extension.
What Would You Look For In a Prosthetic Hand?
I dunno... why don't we ask Howard Wolowitz?
Ask the fucking prosthetics guy that will get/make her a new one when the time comes. I mean he is qualified to actually give opinions. How many people on here that would respond to you are going to actually have a prosthetic or even know anything about how they work/perform in the real world? None. Im sure some will say they have one or "Know a friend of a friends former roomates neighbor that one" but bottom line is they don't know dick.
This question is as stupid as asking for legal advice online in a murder trial. Its the internet, 98% of your answers will come from people who don't know shit but think they do.
Groovy.
>medication that saved her life will probably cost her hands and feet.
What kind of medication causes you to lose your hands and feet?
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
That way, people will know I'm a Jedi who can deal with a missing hand or two.
Fingers.
I second this -- there is nothing that can give her the full functionality of hands or feet. But if that can be avoided by a horde of Slashdotters googling for alternatives to this medicine, that'd be better.
Given the theme of this website and the users that theme attracts, there will likely be few traditional artists, and of those, a ridiculously small segment with any experience using a prosthetic hand.
If you wanted to know which type of prosthetic hand can best run a Model M, maybe /. is the place.
First, ask her what will be important. She'll be using the thing.
Then, ask fora dedicated to prostheses and artists what they suggest.
Unless your question is about BitCoin and I misread it, in which case I apologize.
i don't think it's technologically impossible to get on the far side of the uncanny valley
anime penis fingers
...so this is a pretty big deal."
As if it would NOT be a big deal for anybody else?
A synthetic boob?
Personally, I would go with the stump. Create an attachment that can hold a brush and learn to paint using arm and body movements.
What medication takes someone's hands and feet?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krukenberg_procedure
Do a youtube search for "prostetic arm johns hopkins" and you will get an idea of what is possible. It is controlled by the patients own nervous system an has every degree of freedom a normal hand has. There are 54 processors in the hand alone. It would be great for an artist. It unfortunatly is still a prototype unless you have enough determination to get into the testing program. I wish you luck, as I woud like to see everyone benifit from this program asap.
You ever read "The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress"? I'd want one like Manny's, with interchangeable tools.
Well, then I look for no features. I can't be jacked off with artificial hands! If she wants to be like T-Bag from Prison Break then that's her choice. But if she is ever to give me a hand-job, she better get human hands implanted.... FEMALE human hands.
I saw some things here:
http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/5-year-old-gets-3-d-printed-robohand-internet-collaborators-1B8242915
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:44150
I'm not sure if it would work for an artist, but it is supposed to be low-cost.
Interoperability with existing hands.
http://bebionic.com/
Check this out. Some pretty good demonstrations of tying shoes, holding various things. I haven't looked into prosthetics much but this one really caught my eye.
Nothing beats the traditional snap-on appendage.
First go watch Kentucky Fried Movie or "Enter the Dragon" or "Innerspace" (note the "Robert Picardo character". That should give you some ideas.
Just like amputee athletes have prosthetic legs specialized for running which they don't use for walking around on a day-to-day basis, she might benefit from a prosthetic specifically made to hold a paintbrush, or one where the end of it actually is a paintbrush. That could be both cheaper and more usable than a prosthetic hand which attempts to use intricate finger controls to try to hold a paintbrush.
---------
There is inferior bacteria on the interior of your posterior.
Well, the recipient is an artist so she might want to go to the portrait section.
One benefit to the wars we've been fighting, is the advancement of trauma-related medical technology. So many soldiers are surviving injuries that would have killed them in previous generations, leaving them with missing limbs instead. This in turn is advancing prosthetic technology quite a bit.
I expect that we'll see some really great prosthetics on the market over the next couple decades that will put existing ones to shame. Whatever prosthetic this family member gets in the immediate future, she'll probably be able to upgrade to something that improves her quality of life dramatically fairly soon regardless.
-mrxak
Onions Will Kill You
My handless Uncle had two finger hooks, could drive a car, painted with his teeth though. more precise control afaict really admired his paintings.
I may also want a custom chainsaw arm, too.
Groovy
Anyway, opensource or licence/patent free commercial artificial limbs, while technically possible, I believe are practically impossible at lest for now. Legislation(FDA, etc) on this tech is the harshest and from my experience as a medical engineer they don't like any time of user customization (and for valid reasons, for MOST of the time). You might be able to build your own from scratch or buy compatible parts from some unlicensed(or pirate) vendor in the future, but most likely it will void all warranty and insurance you have on the prosthetic device.
This market is moving rapidly and function keeps improving.
As one example "5-year-old [Liam] is missing parts of his right hand, and this open-source prosthetic hand has given him a jolt of increased function. The video clip after the break shows him on the third day with the device. He’s practicing picking up coins from a stack using the hand. Just $150 in parts, combined with the hard work and good nature of the developers, made this possible." http://hackaday.com/2013/02/08/3d-printed-prosthetic-hand-helps-out-for-about-150/
For lower limbs, Jaipur Foot/Leg/Knee have had incredible performance for being inexpensive http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaipur_foot
"Sudha Chandran, an Indian actress and dancer, lost her limb in an accident in 1982. She was fitted with the Jaipur Foot and started dancing once again; her journey is the theme of the Telugu 1984 film Mayuri (Peahen), remade into a 1986 Hindi film, Naache Mayuri (Peahen Dancing). Both the films starred Sudha."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaipur_foot
With these rates of change, a replacement every two years would, I think, make sense. The idea of using specific appliances makes a lot of sense.
Hope she heals and that this is a mood discussion.
A simple clip to hold the paintbrush is sufficient. In fine arts painting, the finger tips are still, and most of the guidance comes from the arm and body movements as in classical fencing. Monet in old age had very gnarled hands from arthritic joints and had to have his family strap the long handled brushes to his wrists so that he could continue painting in the loveliness of his gardens.
A USB port so I can type faster than actually using my hand?
... prosthetic hand looks for YOU!
This sig is not paradoxical or ironic.
The vast overwhelming majority of users would look for accurate fast repeatable action.
After all, The Internet Is For Porn.
Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
Sorry for shouting. But save the nerves. I run a regen med research lab, and there is lots of cool stuff coming down the pipe. I know, I know, Real Soon Now, but advancements are on the way. The big limitation is going to be nerves though. No matter how much cool stuff we put together with artificial bone and patient-specific stem-cell derived muscles etc, it's all moot if you can't control it properly, and the nerves, for a variety of reasons, will be the hardest part to regenerate.
Fortunately, there has been some really interesting work done in terms of rerouting the nerves (both motor and sensory) - basically, if the nerves don't attach to anything, they die. But, if before you amputate, you take the nerves and move the ends over so they now lie against skin and muscle etc that will not be amputated, the cells remain alive (and functional). This has lots of interesting applications in terms of interfacing with prosthetics, but also in 5 or 10 years (or longer, if so - sorry, everything is often slower and more complex than we hope), this means the nerves are still there, waiting to be connected to the regenerated limb. Here is one paper that discusses it in more detail:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2685921/
I don't want to give you too much false hope about where the technology is going - I am very excited about the potential, but there are still a number of obstacles. So, live for today, but there is hope for tomorrow as well.
MU
I'm posting anonymously, and my earlier real advice post hasn't gotten modded up, but it's pretty stupid that most of what we see on here that's been modded up is just making jokes about this. This was a serious question. The asker came here for real tech advice, not star wars jokes.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ng-l4gdoSQE
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
I hate to be a downer here but my father recently went through such a procedure, losing his primary hand. He ended up getting an elaborate top of the line mechanical hand that uses the nerves that would go to your hand to move the hand.
The thing was junk, really. It ended up being pretty fragile overall, and while kind of neat that he could control the hand with the impulses from his nerves, it was very non-fluid and limited. I mean what can you expect really, right? He prefers to just use the stump on his arm as a sort of giant finger instead of use it anymore.
Not sure what kind of creative work your family member is doing, but my only suggestion is just to avoid the mechanical ones. They seem like a good choice because in theory they give you more control, but they're quite prone to breakage and are just ineffectual. She would probably be better off going the attachment route with non-hand like tool specific things attached for what she wants to do.
You're probably right, although she does a lot of sculpture as well that requires gluing small things to other things. Hence, the search for something that can manipulate small objects.
Since that whas what Like had in his...
While we are talking of artificial limbs replacing real limbs, how about lasers in iach finger like Timothy Zahn's Cobra warriors
Theres a new book coming out next week - Cobra Slave but I haven't read it yet, I will wait for the final installment before downloading it.from Baen
remeber if you want to save money on the monthly bundle you have to purchase before the 15th
12 oz was the designed in minimum lifting capacity of the Boston Arm, controlled by myoelectric sensor on the shoulder. When I asked the desinger why, he made the casual motion of lifting a beer can to his lips. Took me 5 minutes to stop laughing, no one else in the presentation understood what we were laughing about.
Sculpt topiaries. http://www.theroguedolls.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/edward_scissorhands.jpg
If she is in the hospital undergoing treatment with vasopressor infusions, you may want to ask the doctor if they have considered applying topical nitroglycerin ointment to the hands and feet. If may help maintain perfusion, but there's no guarantee.
My dad lost both hands and most of his forearms as a child. He has always preferred to use his own stumps as-is, rather than mucking about with prosthetics. But then he learnt to use his arms at an early age, and he was determined to do everything he could.
He can do practically everything you or I could do, except for things he simply can't reach or that require juggling to many things too rapidly. He has the neatest "handwriting" of anyone I know, he types by holding a pen, he can drive a car, develop software, and he's built a house extension. As an adult he's always been a productive member of society.
While you may develop the dexterity to use a prothethic. Don't discount the potential usefulness of your remaining limbs just as they are.
09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
Instant middle finger extension
Table-ized A.I.
Does this include brain implants? The bionic ear involves long term brain implants so it might be less of a problem in the brain. Robotic devices have been linked directly to a chimp's brain. Which makes concepts involving links to the nervous system obsolete.
I'd be disgusted if it weren't so damn perfect for this case. It allows for a lot of pincer strength, proprioception, a relatively high level of dexterity (it does much better blind than any cybernetic prosthesis), and has a biological feedback that's exactly the same as the regular forearm tissue, since that's what it is.
The only real drawbacks are that it has no thumb equivalent since it's a single-jointed pincer, and that once the operation is complete and healed it looks gross.
A major advantage is that it doesn't preclude the use of prosthetics in the future. It preserves a lot of nerves, and could possibly be linked up with a prosthetic forearm and hand kit in coming years, reducing strength requirements for these prosthesis since there won't be need for a prosthetic elbow, nor the need to probe around an inert stump. I'd bet that an actively used pincer could be much more quickly integrated to use a cybernetic controller than an inert stump, since the user keeps the pincer's motor and proprioceptive feedback nerves active all the time.
Hectice, baby, Mercator says hello to you
Electrodes of any kind implanted directly into the brain are an insanely high risk for infection. That's why we do it to chimps instead of people. Nobody wants meningitis, but I'd rather a chimp get sacrificed in the name of science than condemn a human to the same fate, even though chimps are essentially the same as us.
Brain implanted electrodes also can't really be removed, so once they're in, they're there forever. Or at least until they're metabolized and worn down beyond use. They also have a high risk for acute immune reactions, which cause the brain to swell up rapidly, causing terrible problems similar to coma complications, and cerebral hemorrhage.
Direct brain implanted electrodes are absolutely Not ready for prime time.
So let's keep working on them, and experimenting, and looking for alternatives. I'm a strong believer that eventually we'll have nano-tech that can cross the blood brain barrier, appear invisible to the immune system, set up shop in our brains, figure them out, and open up an API of some kind for us, so we'll be able to store our own personal memories and life feed directly to silicon, or receive memories, training, and data directly from the silicon (or whatever we're using) via these nanites that have worked their way into the brain. This is quite futuristic, but I feel it's an endgame to nano-tech. We'll eventually be able to use it to maintain the health of our bodies, and use it as storage space and up-links to others in our brain.
Hectice, baby, Mercator says hello to you
Prosthetic hair on the palms.
Nothing less for me!
they are just too damned expensive...
I read this article (popsci.com) a little while back. It shows a promising, relatively speaking low cost, option
http://www.popsci.com/diy/article/2013-02/how-two-makers-built-customizable-new-prosthetic-hand-150-and-changed-boys-life
Common Sense (+1)
Are they located next to the boom sticks?
For those hesitant to google it, but curious what this is: it involves refashioning the end of the forearm into pincers, using each of the bones as a "finger".
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
Unfortunately all the latest gadgets and technologies won't match having actual hands and feet.
Is there anything that you can do to prevent this loss? Maybe someone who could come and massage hands and feet to keep up the blood flow? Is there nothing that can be done to try to prevent this from happening?
nuff said.
Well then fuck her. She should be giving away all of her work for free.
Now mod me up +5 groupthink.
hold a lightsaber and not be separated from the rest of me body
I have worked with multiple people who have used functional prosthetic s after losing limbs in IED blasts and from gunshot wounds. Over the past 3 years I have seen variations from simple interchangeable "Hands" (hook, claw, non-movable hand for aesthetics), to controllable digits (simple 3 or 4 finger prosthesis which work with the remaining muscles in the forearm to activate individual fingers in various poses). These can range in cost from relatively inexpensive ($200-$300) to as much as a car ($14,000) for the aforementioned controllable digits. The amount of fine motor-dexterity which she will be able to have with her new prosthesis will depend somewhat on the kind of prosthesis, but much more on her practice with it. I have seen generic tool holding attachments for some of the soldiers I have worked with in physical therapy which they have used to do things like paint, and woodcraft - One service member who does custom cabinetry said it took him about a year to regain his skill with carpentry tools to the same level before he was blown up, but said that with all the practice in physical therapy with fine movement skills, he has surpassed where he was before his injuries.
Ultimately this will come down to a matter of cost (what the insurance company is willing to pay for vs what you can pay out of pocket), and getting past the emotional hurdles to retrain the fine motor skills that will be lost. With any kind of life-changing injuries, it will take a lot of physical therapy, dedication, and practice to resume a profession or hobby which requires the use of now missing limbs.
Of my enemies.
Necktie !!!!
Oops.
Here is an article about custom prosthesis that could be helpful. They do custom styles and materials, could be useful for an artist to have a custom setup. http://pixelnautpress.com/beyond-function-the-alternative-limb-project/
Wolverine!
I've tried hands (on one side) before and I couldn't do anything hardly! It cut my typing speed in half over hooks and I was unable to stuff arduino boards and shields because there was NO fine control. I made some mods to my panavise to make it more useable and some mods to clothing (though those would not be required for a below elbow...I'm above elbow.)
I am working on an open source arm controller...while it will control hands it also controls hooks which I have found way more practical and realistic. The other thing about any electric option is you can't tell where they are without looking at them (that's a bigger deal than one would think!). With my body-powered ones I can tell roughly if a hook is open/closed, if it's holding something and where an elbow is because the harness, which goes over my shoulder blades, controls cables that are lengthened/shortened by shoulder abduction.
To be able to make my punches as powerful as kicks ...
A dual power supply that could easily be rewired and used to power a storage room door in order to escape into the jungle.
Hello there. I've also recently lost both my hands and searched extensively for the right prosthetics.
First of all a very important factor is where the amputations where made. My left arm was cut just above the elbow, the right hand at the mid section of the metacarpals. I was/am left handed, and a palm prosthetic costs a fortune, so i had my left hand put back together with a bebionic v2 hand and an otto bock mechanical lower arm. The hand itself is great, very precise, but since the arm doesn't connect to the bone, this precision can only be utilized if the arm is set down in a stabil position, like a desk or something. If the lower arm is still intact, then its really great. Highly functioning, very sensitive, easy to controll, especialy under the age of 35-40. I can pick up a peanut with it. For even more sensitivity, you can try the iLimb from touch bionics, its more programmable for the individual user, has more options, the thumb unit shifts stance electronicly (unlike the bebionic hand or the otto bock hands) and every finger can be controlled separetly. The negatives are, that it has way less durability, so it might not be the best option for a first hand and it costs more. The otto bock hands are very strong, very durable, but also very crude, also I wasn't at all satisfied with their customer service.
If you would like, I can go into more detail, I also needed precision, although i'm not an artist, but I think our situations where similar. Here is my mail address : gyorgy.levay(at)gmail.com
Good luck!