Thursday, 15 September 2016

Sept 15 2016 - New socket, Driving, Paralympics.

I spent yesterday at the prosthesis place. They built a new socket. It is a very complicated socket. Slit right down the front, and held closed tight with velcro. The velcro wasn't strong enough, so I added a big hose clamp also.

 The new socket is not as light as you would think with all the holes in it. The remaining part is thick and strong. It is made to be worn with a thick plastic fexible inner liner. Eventually the liner should be permanently attached to the socket.
One major problem we have now is that my skin sticks to the liner. Which is good to keep it on tight, but bad for putting it on. My stump pain is bad when pushing the stump down into anything. So if the liner and the socket are attached, then I would have to push very hard to slide the skin against the liner. That is what we are trying to avoid. Lubrication is a bad idea because then the stump would also slide out of the liner easily.
My previous liner was a flexible silicone sleeve that sort of lived on the stump, and was used to form a vacuum between the liner and the socket. As you can see, it would be hard to form a vacuum with all the holes in the new socket, so the vacuum is between my skin and the plastic liner, then the liner somehow attaches tightly to the socket.
This afternoon, I went for a short shopping walk in the local shop. I needed food. The whole apparatus was very uncomfortable. There was no pain, but the intense desire to remove the leg right there in the store was hard to resist. With no way to securely attach the liner to the socket, the liner was sometimes loose. In the store, reaching for garbage bags, the socket and leg fell off. The liner was still on tight, so I was able to put the socket back on. But it never got on tight enough again to walk on. It was like I had a crutch on my hip. I sort of shuffled the rest of the way through the store to the car. I didn't get some of the stuff I needed.

Tonight I am cutting pieces of foam to fit inside the socket to make it more comfortable



Bradley gave me many types, and thicknesses of foam.
The next big thing is to get the socket and liner to stay together. Some sort of clamp or snap, or something.
I don't see anyway to "not", put the liner on before inserting it into the socket.
My stump didn't pain me today, but right now it is not feeling very pleasant. It is funny to me to be so uncomfortable, without real pain. I fear it takes strain in ways, I hadn't thought about.
 But with all the problems, I was able to do my shopping on my own. A big step for me.

After a few days of playing with the foam to make the socket more comfortable, I think they will build a new socket similar to this one, but with extra thick carbon fiber where I now have the pads.
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The driving school collected me this morning at 04:45.
We went to the Traffic department test center. I was 12th in line. Before they opened at 08:00 there must have been 5 hundred people in the line.
I did my eye test, and then paid lots of money, and got a date to take the learners exam. 28 Sept at 10:00.
 I have 13 days to study. If I pass the learners exam, then the next day I will go and book a date for the driving test.
I talked to some of the guys there. One was going to take his driving test today...for the third time. He booked 3 weeks before. After his flunks, he had to re-book. Once was a wait of 5 weeks between tests. He first booked his learners test in mid June. 3 Months and 6 full days of testing. What a waste of human time.

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I have been watching the Paralympics. One of the largest Prosthetic makers "Otto Bock" does charitable emergency repairs of prosthetics at the Paralympics. So far this year:

Repairs by equipment
Wheelchairs: 2245
Prosthetics: 348
Orthotics: 134
Repairs by Sport
Athletics: 385
Wheelchair Basketball: 258
Wheelchair Tennis: 163
Powerlifting: 140
Swimming: 122
Total Games repairs so far: 2727

They talked about how the Paralympics is becoming all about technology, science, and electronics.

If a prosthesis becomes an essential part of who you are, then it would be part of what makes you, you. Biology alone will no longer define a human being.

Nerves transmit muscle signals at 119 meters per second.
Nerves transmit pain signals at a very slow .6 meters per second.
Nerves transmit touch signals at 76 meters per second.
What if you had a brain interface that detected a thought for a muscle movement, changed that signal into an electric signal, and sent that signal to a muscle via wires at almost the speed of light. You could have reflexes that are thousands of times faster than a normal human. Tennis anyone?

What if you had a system (like a SCUBA system re-breather) that could inject oxygenated blood cells directly into your blood stream. You could hold your breath for hours.

What if your artificial heart had a boost function to speed up the flow of blood throughout the body.

What if you had a helmet that could measure brain functions, and could generate these function. An athlete could then use this to stop pain signals. Professional football players would love that.

A fancy prosthetic electronic knee could evolve into a leg system...into a lower body system, into a complete body system. So a completely paralyzed person could be an athlete...or a super athlete.

 Now blind people "drive" to the shops in driver-less cars. Putting the same electronics on the head, could allow a blind person to walk to the store unaided.

Soon a blind, paralyzed person will be able to kick ass in ping pong.
Pure biological people will be severely disadvantaged in the near future.

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