Ross Holland discovered a unique way to wear his prosthetic legs by turning the feet backward."It's so much more comfortable. It's so much easier," said Holland, a 34-year-old who lives in Gettysburg.
For an estimated two million people in the U.S. living with limb loss, commercial-grade prosthetics can be bulky, unintuitive, and still make everyday activities, like stepping over a sleeping cat, a ...
A robotic leg with motors that work like bike gears could let a wearer walk up stairs – which many people find impossible with unpowered prostheses. Most prostheses have no motors to actively assist ...
A commercial robotic leg could potentially benefit both higher- and lower-mobility amputees, University of Michigan ...
DICKINSON, N.D. -- Five-year-old Tyson Williams darted around Rocky Butte Park in Dickinson on Wednesday -- up the hills, through the trees and back to the playground. He was still learning to use to ...
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