LeTourneau Empowering Global Solutions
Encyclopedia
LeTourneau Engineering Global Solutions (LEGS) is a non-profit initiative based in Longview, Texas
Longview, Texas
Longview is a city in Gregg and Harrison Counties in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2010 Census, the population was 80,455. Most of the city is located in Gregg County, of which it is the county seat; only a small part extends into the western part of neighboring Harrison County. It is...

, focused on bringing innovative, extremely low cost, high-quality prosthetic technology to people in developing nations.
Developing country
A developing country, also known as a less-developed country, is a nation with a low level of material well-being. Since no single definition of the term developing country is recognized internationally, the levels of development may vary widely within so-called developing countries...

 The focus of LEGS technology is its M1 Knee, a polycentric knee joint that meets international standards and can be manufactured locally for as little as $15USD.

History

Founded in 2004, LEGS is a multidisciplinary technology development program operated by LeTourneau University
LeTourneau University
LeTourneau University is a private, interdenominational Christian university located in Longview, Texas, United States with flagship programs in engineering, aeronautical science, business and education...

 (LETU) in Longview, Texas. The program builds on synergies between the undergraduate educational programs of the university and faculty research interests to create a focused program of product development.

Resident engineering expertise in biomechanics, materials, manufacturing and mechanical systems is combined with established prosthetics theory and practice. As a result, LEGS’ engineers design and produce new and innovative prosthetic component systems, which are highly functional and durable at minimum expense.

The genesis of the LEGS Program can be traced back to when its executive director, LeTourneau University biomedical engineering professor Dr. Roger Gonzalez, was a young boy living in El Paso, Texas. During a family trip across the border to poverty-stricken Juarez, Mexico, he saw helpless, crippled children and adult amputees, unable to walk or work, begging for money along the roadsides. He remembers his father saying, “There, but for the grace of God, go you and I.” That experience had a profound impact on his young heart.

In 2004, Dr. Gonzalez launched a senior biomedical engineering design project known as LeTourneau Engineering Global Solutions (LEGS). The challenge was to design and build a low-cost above-the-knee (AK) prosthetic that was durable, maintenance-free and could be easily manufactured in developing countries. “Our goal was to take advanced, first world technology and reverse-engineer the expense out of it, to produce a low-cost prosthetic that would work well in the rough, uneven terrain of developing nations."

By combining in-house engineering expertise with modern assessment tools, the LEGS teams developed initial prototypes for both a prosthetic knee and foot. These prototypes were extensively tested in LETU’s labs to verify their basic performance. The teams then worked with local amputees to assess how the prototype designs would work on an actual prosthetic limb.

Gait analysis sessions were undertaken using a sophisticated motion camera systems. The students assessed the patient’s stride length, cadence and energy consumption. The results of these tests were extremely positive and indicated that the team was ready for the next important step––validating their design in the harsh conditions of the developing world.

In the summer of 2005, the first LEGS prosthetic prototypes were manufactured and tested at CURE International’s Bethany Crippled Children’s Center in Kijabe, Kenya. Dr. Gonzalez and four senior engineering students spent three weeks providing about a dozen disabled Kenyans, mostly children, with prosthetic legs. They also provided the raw materials to produce additional legs.

In many poor developing countries, the standard lower limb prosthetic is a “peg leg” that requires the amputee to swing the leg around from the hip, causing abnormal gait and strained
muscular development that leads to long term orthopedic problems and pain. “Our prosthetic knee design leg is far more functional because it simulates natural movement, rotating freely during the leg swing and then automatically locking when they put weight on it,” says Dr. Gonzalez. “The knee is also designed to meet international performance standards as set forth by the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO).”

Overview of international work

Currently, LEGS technology is present in Bangladesh
Bangladesh
Bangladesh , officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh is a sovereign state located in South Asia. It is bordered by India on all sides except for a small border with Burma to the far southeast and by the Bay of Bengal to the south...

, Kenya
Kenya
Kenya , officially known as the Republic of Kenya, is a country in East Africa that lies on the equator, with the Indian Ocean to its south-east...

, Senegal
Senegal
Senegal , officially the Republic of Senegal , is a country in western Africa. It owes its name to the Sénégal River that borders it to the east and north...

, and Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone , officially the Republic of Sierra Leone, is a country in West Africa. It is bordered by Guinea to the north and east, Liberia to the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west and southwest. Sierra Leone covers a total area of and has an estimated population between 5.4 and 6.4...

 in over a dozen local clinics within these countries. Each of these countries has international NGO partners who host LEGS when they are on the ground.Currently, LEGS does not fit patients; rather it teaches local clinicians how to manufacture the LEGS M1 knee using locally obtainable materials. LEGS evaluates sites that can best benefit from its technology, and then holds Demonstration Clinics and Technology Transfer Workshops to teach the manufacturing and technology of the LEGS knee most effectively.

Kenya

In East Africa, the LEGS team has had a relationship with AIC-Cure International
CURE International
CURE International is a nonprofit organization based in Lemoyne, Pennsylvania. CURE's efforts are focused on providing medical care to children suffering primarily from orthopedic conditions. With the mission of healing the sick and proclaiming the kingdom of God, CURE serves a dual purpose in the...

 in Kijabe, Kenya for five years. AIC-Cure International Children’s Hospital fits both children and adults in need of above-knee prosthetic devices, and has done so since 1998. The LEGS team has fitted dozens of patients at AIC-Cure with the LEGS knee, and has begun to teach local clinicians how to manufacture the LEGS knee as the technology has improved. During the time spent in Kenya this past summer, the team held a Technology Demonstration. This is different from a workshop in that the team only presented the LEGS technology package, as the local clinics did not have a chance to produce their own knees. This approach was due in part to the limited amount of time the team had available to spend in Kenya, as well as the large number of people attending the demonstration. 15 different people from seven different entities related to prosthetics attended the demonstration. The attendees were from other parts of Kenya, as well as other countries in East Africa. Many were interested in implementing LEGS technology in their clinics, and the LEGS team hopes to visit other clinics on return visits to Kenya.

Bangladesh

A Technology Transfer Workshop was held in Savar, Bangladesh in the summer of 2009. The LEGS team performed the workshop at the Center for the Rehabilitation of the Paralyzed (CRP) and was hosted by the Memorial Christian Hospital of Bangladesh (MCH). The LEGS team has had a relationship with MCH four four years. MCH personnel have worked towards improving the lives of amputees in rural Bangladesh for decades. The CRP hosted the workshops for several days in July 2009, and there were 15 different individuals from four different entities related to prosthetics. Besides demonstrating the manufacturing of a LEGS knee for local participants, the LEGS team did minor repairs and outcomes testing on ten individuals who had been previously fitted with the LEGS Knee. Most of the repairs were minimal which serves as a testament to the durability of the knee, since many of these patients have been wearing the LEGS knee for several years. In addition, the patients continued to express great satisfaction with their prostheses.

Senegal

The LEGS team conducted its first Technology Transfer Workshop (TTW) in Senegal in the summer of 2009. The goal of this workshop was to introduce the LEGS knee as another prosthetic option, and to teach local clinicians in the manufacturing of the LEGS knee, which would be used as part of a complete prosthetic limb for amputees.

The LEGS team was hosted in Senegal by Dr. Amadou Koura Ndao, Director of the Centre National d’Appareillage Orthopedie in Senegal. The center has operated for many years and has been committed to providing the highest possible service to the disabled of Senegal. The TTW was attended by officials from four different organizations related to prosthetics. Some were from other parts of Senegal, and some were from different countries in West Africa, all of whom were very impressed by the LEGS technology. In fact, the Senegalese Ministry of Health was so impressed with the Workshop put on by the LEGS team that officials have offered to collaborate with clnics in Senegal to provide them with the Delrin plastic necessary for producing the LEGS knee, lowering the costs of production even further. The LEGS team plans to return to Senegal next summer to follow-up with the patients that it fitted this past summer, and to expand its available technology around the region.

Sierra Leone

The LEGS team was active in Sierra Leone from 2007-2008. Their first trip in January 2007 was to evaluate the potential for having Sierra Leone as a hub. During this time, [Mercy Ships-New Steps] became LEGS’ host during their trips to Sierra Leone. This was followed by a trip in 2008 where LEGS held a TTW in the National Center for Rehabilitation in Freeown. The TTW was attended by NGO’s such as Handicap International
Handicap International
Handicap International is a non-governmental organization created in 1982 to provide help in refugee camps in Cambodia and Thailand. Based in Belgium and France, it has since opened branches in six other countries : Switzerland, Luxembourg, United Kingdom, Germany, Canada and the United States...

 (HI) and the Prosthetic Outreach Foundation (POF). After Mercy Ships-New Steps pulled out of Sierra Leone, the LEGS team lost it’s host, and was unable to return. However, local professionals working for POF are still manufacturing the LEGS M1 Knee, proving that LEGS technology is a viable option for a locally obtainable prosthetic solution.

Materials validation

Prosthetic components developed through LEGS will adhere to the same rigorous testing standards as their first-world counterparts, and be tested in accordance with the requirements of ISO 10328, which includes both static and fatigue loading. Additional materials testing will be undertaken to fully characterize materials in accordance with relevant ISO and American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM)
ASTM International
ASTM International, known until 2001 as the American Society for Testing and Materials , is an international standards organization that develops and publishes voluntary consensus technical standards for a wide range of materials, products, systems, and services...

standards. Work will include the development of permissible material property limits and dimensional adaptation guidelines, which would facilitate substitutions of specified materials not accessible in a given country.

A a new type of custom foot tester is also currently under development by LEGS. It has been created to improve the ability of the prosthetics community to assess long-term foot performance under realistic service conditions in the laboratory. No tester like this currently exists, even in the developed world. The new prototype tester was constructed in 2007 and currently awaits programming and validation. Once this tester is operational it will be used extensively in the development of a new foot design.

Laboratory-based patient outcomes evaluation

The LEGS Outcomes and Rehabilitation Research team is responsible for evaluating outcomes for patients using LEGS prosthetic technology and for developing guidelines for prosthetists and therapists to use in the rehabilitation of patients using the technology. This includes the development of programs for both laboratory evaluations here in the U.S. as well as field evaluations at LEGS overseas sites.

Laboratory evaluations of patient outcomes are conducted in two ways:
  • Quantitative assessments using motion-capture camera systems, a multi-sensor walking mat and respirometry-based physiological assessments.
  • Qualitative evaluations focusing on patient feedback and established evaluation questionnaires.


All of the laboratory evaluations involve volunteer amputees who are fitted with a LEGS prosthesis and a comparative U.S. commercial prosthesis by their personal prosthetist. All U.S. laboratory assessments are conducted on the campus of LeTourneau University. International patient outcomes have confirmed that the LEGS knee meets international standards, and maintains its functionality, even after several years of use in the field.

External links

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