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Unlock the Power of Wearable Tool to Treat Hand Edema

by Colleen Fleiss on Apr 30 2023 8:15 PM
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Unlock the Power of Wearable Tool to Treat Hand Edema
KnitDema, the newly developed knitted wearable tool helps treat hand edema. Hand edema is the swelling caused by excess fluid accumulation, from injury or disease.
Currently, the best treatment for hand edema is manual edema massage (MEM) //by a trained therapist, but access to care and cost can make the procedure prohibitive.

Cindy (Hsin-Liu) Kao, assistant professor of human centered design and director of the Hybrid Body Lab, and her team worked with physicians and therapists to devise a knitted wearable technology called KnitDema that can gently massage the swollen area through sequential compression by small robotic actuators.

They chose to focus on hand edema, particularly swelling of the fingers, “because it’s a condition that affects a lot of people and can have significant impact to activities of daily living, since finger mobility is indispensable in our day-to-day lives,” Kao said.

Participants generally rated the device as comfortable to wear, quiet and offering more evenly dispersed compression around the swollen area as compared to MEM treatment.

Robotic Textile to Treat Hand Edema

Kao sees KnitDema, and potential other devices using this technology, as a personalized rehabilitation device, a term coined by the team as something that could be prescribed to an outpatient, as would a medication.

“Instead of having to schedule a hard-to-get visit with a therapist for MEM,” she said, “we envision this as something that people could take home with them. They would go to their rehab doctor and their occupational or physical therapist once, and at that session they would be able to configure the right amount of compression for daily use, then adjust as necessary.”

“It also allows for use any time that is convenient for the patient – often when symptoms are worst for the individual,” Stilling said. “In addition, each device is personalized for each person through the digital machine knitting, allowing for a customized fit, which is not readily available through standard treatment options on the market.”

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Researchers will present the study at the ACM CHI ’23 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, in Hamburg, Germany.

Source-Eurekalert


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