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Biomechanical and Physiological Comparison Between a Conventional Cyclist and a Paralympic Cyclist with an Optimized Transtibial Prosthesis Design
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Background/Objectives: This study aimed to identify the functional adaptations that enable competitive performance in a Paralympic cyclist with optimized bilateral transtibial prostheses compared to a conventional cyclist. Additionally, it describes the development of the prosthesis, designed through a user-centered engineering process incorporating Quality Function Deployment (QFD), Computer-Aided Design (CAD), Finite Element Analysis (FEA), Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), and topological optimization, with the final design (Design 1.4) achieving optimal structural integrity, aerodynamic efficiency, and anatomical fit. Methods: Both athletes performed a progressive cycling test with 50-watt increments every three minutes until exhaustion. Cardiorespiratory metrics, lactate thresholds, and joint kinematics were assessed. Results: Although the conventional cyclist demonstrated higher Maximal Oxygen Uptake (VO2max) and anaerobic threshold, the Paralympic cyclist exceeded 120% of his predicted VO2max, had a higher Respiratory Exchange Ratio (RER) [1.32 vs. 1.11], and displayed greater joint ranges of motion with lower trunk angular variability. Lactate thresholds were similar between athletes. Conclusions: These findings illustrate, in this specific case, that despite lower aerobic capacity, the Paralympic cyclist achieved comparable performance through efficient biomechanical and physiological adaptations. Integrating advanced prosthetic design with individualized evaluation appears essential to optimizing performance in elite adaptive cycling.
Title: Biomechanical and Physiological Comparison Between a Conventional Cyclist and a Paralympic Cyclist with an Optimized Transtibial Prosthesis Design
Description:
Background/Objectives: This study aimed to identify the functional adaptations that enable competitive performance in a Paralympic cyclist with optimized bilateral transtibial prostheses compared to a conventional cyclist.
Additionally, it describes the development of the prosthesis, designed through a user-centered engineering process incorporating Quality Function Deployment (QFD), Computer-Aided Design (CAD), Finite Element Analysis (FEA), Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), and topological optimization, with the final design (Design 1.
4) achieving optimal structural integrity, aerodynamic efficiency, and anatomical fit.
Methods: Both athletes performed a progressive cycling test with 50-watt increments every three minutes until exhaustion.
Cardiorespiratory metrics, lactate thresholds, and joint kinematics were assessed.
Results: Although the conventional cyclist demonstrated higher Maximal Oxygen Uptake (VO2max) and anaerobic threshold, the Paralympic cyclist exceeded 120% of his predicted VO2max, had a higher Respiratory Exchange Ratio (RER) [1.
32 vs.
1.
11], and displayed greater joint ranges of motion with lower trunk angular variability.
Lactate thresholds were similar between athletes.
Conclusions: These findings illustrate, in this specific case, that despite lower aerobic capacity, the Paralympic cyclist achieved comparable performance through efficient biomechanical and physiological adaptations.
Integrating advanced prosthetic design with individualized evaluation appears essential to optimizing performance in elite adaptive cycling.
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