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Nothing About Us Without Us
Developing Innovative Technologies
For , By and With Disabled Persons

Part Two
CREATIVE SOLUTIONS FOR WALKING
AND FOR LEG AND FOOT PROBLEMS

109

CHAPTER 17

Twist Hoses (and Foot Tubes)
to Help Diego Walk

Foot Tubes That Didn't Work

Diego's biggest difficulty in walking was that the spastic scissoring of his legs caused one foot to hook behind the other when he walked.

DIEGO is a bright, enthusiastic 8-year old boy with spastic cerebral palsy. When his family first took him to PROJIMO, he could walk with a walker, but with difficulty. Without his walker, he could not walk at all. A combination of in-turned feet, scissoring legs, and jerky exaggerated movements made it extremely difficult for him to take steps. With each step, as he brought his back foot forward, the toe of his shoe would begin to hook around the heel of his weight-bearing foot, and he had to drag and jerk it free.

Nonetheless, Diego made a great effort to walk, jerking himself back and forth across the room. "If only my feet ... didn't bump ... together!" said Diego, his voice jerky and high pitched from the spasticity in his throat and tongue.

"We'll see what we can do so your feet don't bump together so much when you walk," said Mari. "Great!" said Diego.

FOOT TUBES THAT ROTATE AND SEPARATE THE LEGS. To help Diego's feet turn outward, and to help his legs separate more when he walked, the team first tried a modification of the foot-tube design (see Chapter 16). They felt this might work because, when the boy relaxed, they could easily point his feet in opposite directions.

A device with 2 plastic bottles mounted on a thin board.

To both rotate and separate Diego's legs during the night, Polo made a device with 2 plastic bottles mounted on a thin board. Diego tried it and thought it might be OK.

Polo made a new device.

Eager to walk better, he promised to use it often. Mari suggested he wear it part of the night, and when he relaxed or watched TV.

Diego, with a foot tubes.

But when the family returned to PROJIMO a few weeks later, Diego was discouraged.

"The thing is uncomfortable for him," said his mother.

"It's killing me!" said Diego with a shy smile. "Isn't there a better way to straighten my stupid feet?"

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"We could try torsion cables," suggested Mari.

"Try what?" asked Diego, doubtfully.

"Rubber tubes from your shoes to your waist, that twist your feet outward," Mari explained. "Interested?"

The boy frowned importantly. "Why not!"

A Trial with Elastic Spiral Leg Bands

An example of elastic spiral leg bands to help turn the toes outward.

Because the plastic bottle foot-tubes had not been successful, Mari wanted to do an experiment to see if twist cables were likely to work. She attached strong elastic straps to the tops of Diego's shoes and wound them up and around his legs, stretching them enough to pull his toes outward. She attached the upper ends behind his back. Then she asked Diego to walk with his walker. She found he walked without his toes turning in as much. And he stumbled less.

Plug-in Twist Hoses (Torsion Cables)

Armando (seated) measures Diego's waist in order to fit him with twist hoses.

Reassured that the cables might help, Mari called Armando from the brace shop to see Diego. She asked him if he could make twist-cables for the boy.

"I think so," said Armando. "We have some old rubber hose from the gas-welder in the wheelchair shop. That should work for the cables."

Diego already had a new pair of shoes that fit over his below-knee orthopedic braces. "Do you think you can make the cables so that Diego can attach and remove them from his shoes easily?" Mari asked Armando. "That way he can break them in bit by bit, without much discomfort." Diego nodded with approval.

"I'll see what I can do," said Armando.

Armando designed and made twist-cables that could easily plug in and out of Diego's shoes. First he made a metal waist band, to which he riveted a leather belt with a buckle of self-sticking tape (Velcro). On both sides of the belt he fastened a metal tube that held the upper ends of the pieces of welding hose.

Shoes with plug-in twist hoses.

  • On the bottom of each hose, Armando attached a round metal tube.
  • On the tube he welded a metal bar.
  • The bar slips easily into and out of the flattened heel tube.
  • In each shoe's heel, Armando put a rectangular metal sleeve, made by flattening a thin-walled steel tube (from the scrap bin.)
  • To make it easier for Diego to put on his shoes, Armando added self-sticking Velcro straps.

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SURPRISING RESULTS. When the twist tubes were finished, Diego tried them. They were easy to put on. First he put on his braces and shoes, next the waist belt, and then he plugged the cables into his shoes. Armando showed him how to twist the cables before plugging them in, so that they rotated his feet outward.

An unplanned advantage to the plug-in feature was that the boy himself could experiment with the amount of twist he wanted. The twisting force on his feet depended on how many turns he gave the cables before plugging them into the heels of his shoes.

As soon as the cables were attached, Diego began to walk with his walker.

As soon as the cables were attached, Diego began to walk with his walker. To his own and his parents surprise, almost immediately he was able to swing one foot past the other without the toe of that shoe bumping into the heel of the other. This made walking a lot easier.

Mari watched carefully as Diego walked. She was pleased to see that although his feet now turned outward slightly, his knees pointed straight forward. (If the cables had caused the knees to twist outwardly [valgus], this could mean that they were causing a harmful twist at the hips.)

Diego let go of the walker and began to walk without it!

Diego walked back and forth with his walker a few times. Then, to everyone's amazement, he let go of the walker and began to walk without it! At first he wobbled and almost fell. But soon he figured out how to balance, and proudly walked back and forth on the porch. Diego grinned ear-to-ear as he walked. His mother wept with delight. Everyone applauded both for Diego and Armando.

Diego Armando talked about his dream...

Diego's middle name also happens to be Armando. In the adventure of building and trying the new device, the two Armando's formed a sort of a bond. (Armando, the brace maker, had polio as a baby and had begun to walk only when he, too, was 8 years old - also with PROJIMO's help.) When Mari asked Diego Armando what he wanted to do when he grew up, the boy replied, "I want to make braces and help other kids learn to walk, like mytocayo does." (Tocayo is Spanish for name-sake.)

If Diego follows through on his dream, he will be the fourth youngster who first came to PROJIMO to be fitted with braces, and who then became a community-based brace maker himself.

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A Walker with a Foot Separator - in Bangladesh

Different programs find different ways to deal with similar problems. At the Center for Rehabilitation of the Paralyzed, in Bangladesh, there was a little girl named JANAKI, who had cerebral palsy. Like Diego, she had difficulty walking with a standard walker. Her spastic legs tended to scissor, and would bump against each other when she tried to take steps.

After experimenting with a number of alternatives, the staff made a simple metal walker for her which had bars positioned between her legs. The lower bar was covered with a sponge roll. The roll was upholstered with smooth plastic, so that her lower legs would slide against it as she walked. With this device, Janaki was able to walk much better. Because the bar held her feet somewhat apart, she also had better balance.

The walker also had a small seat on which Janaki could sit when she wanted to rest.

A walker with a foot separator. Delighted with her new walker, Janaki proudly walks in front of her mother.

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Nothing About Us Without Us
Developing Innovative Technologies
For, By and With Disabled Persons
by David Werner

Published by
HealthWrights
Workgroup for People's Health and Rights
Post Office Box 1344
Palo Alto, CA 94302, USA