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Smart Crutch Tips for Guided Weight-Bearing in Patients Recovering From Tibial Shaft Fractures
Sponsor: Comeback Mobility Inc
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether personalized weight-bearing prescriptions using Smart Crutch Tips™ can improve recovery after surgery for tibial shaft fractures. The study will also assess how safe and practical this approach is in daily outpatient use. Can a personalized weight-bearing program based on CT and finite element analysis help the fracture heal faster? Can it help patients return to full weight-bearing sooner? Can it reduce the fear of movement during recovery? Does iterative walking in the early postoperative period support faster or better bone healing? Researchers will compare standard rehabilitation to different types of personalized weight-bearing programs to see which leads to faster healing, earlier mobility, and better outcomes. Participants will: Use Smart Crutch Tips™ during walking for up to 24 weeks; Follow a personalized weight-bearing prescription based on CT scans and biomechanical modeling; Follow a specific walking plan with real-time audio and visual feedback; Attend six follow-up visits over 36 weeks for clinical exams, x-rays, and CT scans; Complete online questionnaires about pain, activity, and fear of movement.
Official title: Study of Individual Weight-bearing and Iterative Walking Using "ComeBack Mobility" Smart Crutch Tips for Mechanical Stimulation of Tibial Shaft Fracture Healing.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 80 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2025-10-28
Completion Date
2027-02-15
Last Updated
2026-04-09
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Smart Crutch Tips™
Smart Crutch Tips™ are sensor-equipped crutch attachments that measure real-time axial loading during ambulation. The devices connect via Bluetooth to a mobile application and deliver auditory and visual feedback to guide patients toward prescribed weight-bearing levels. The devices continuously record loading and step-count data for clinical monitoring and analysis.
Finite Element Analysis (FEA)
Finite Element Analysis (FEA) is performed up to four times postoperatively to generate individualized weight-bearing prescriptions during rehabilitation. Simulations are based on CT scans and include segmentation and biomechanical modeling of the bone-fixator system. Assessments occur at: 7 days (baseline), 6 weeks, 12 weeks, and optionally at 16 weeks if healing isn't confirmed. Three regions are segmented: fixation system (screws and nail), bone fragments, and fracture gap. Materials: fixator (Titanium Grade 5), bone (mapped into cortical, trabecular, soft tissue, air), and fracture gap (early connective tissue). FEA calculates personalized safe loading based on: (1) Fixator safety (stress \< 290 MPa), (2) Interfragmentary motion (target: 0.5-2.0 mm), and (3) Strain in the fracture gap (octahedral: 0.001-0.05; hydrostatic: 0.001-0.02), supporting biological healing. Output informs weight-bearing prescriptions and step-count targets, delivered via Smart Crutch Tips™ with real-time fee
Iterative walking
Participants will perform iterative walking sessions as part of their rehabilitation program. These sessions will be repeated throughout the day, with a minimum 2-hour rest interval between sessions. Step count will be progressively increased over time, according to the individualized rehabilitation plan. In the intervention arms, walking sessions will be guided by real-time auditory and visual feedback from Smart Crutch Tips™.
Lower Limb Rehabilitation Exercise Program
A structured exercise program prescribed postoperatively to promote functional recovery after tibial shaft fracture surgery. Exercises target quadriceps, hamstrings, gluteal muscles, and ankle/foot mobility to maintain muscle tone, prevent stiffness, and improve circulation. The program includes isometric and dynamic exercises such as: static quadriceps and hamstring contractions, straight leg raises, hip abduction, knee extension, hamstring curls, heel slides, ankle dorsiflexion/plantarflexion, ankle inversion/eversion, ankle circles, toe spreading, and passive ankle stretching using a strap or towel. Exercises are performed in pain-free ranges with gradual progression in repetitions and sets according to the rehabilitation plan. Certain ankle and foot mobility exercises (dorsiflexion/plantarflexion) are also performed hourly during the day to prevent swelling and thrombosis.
Locations (11)
Kyiv City Clinical Hospital No. 1
Kyiv, Kyiv Oblast, Ukraine
Municipal Clinical Hospital No. 4 of the Dnipro City Counci
Dnipro, Ukraine
Municipal Non-Profit Enterprise "City Clinical Hospital No. 16" of the Dnipro City Council
Dnipro, Ukraine
Railway Clinical Hospital No. 1 of Kyiv Station
Kyiv, Ukraine
Kyiv City Clinical Hospital No. 17
Kyiv, Ukraine
Institute of Traumatology and orthopedics of the national academy of medical sciences of Ukraine
Kyiv, Ukraine
Kyiv City Clinical Hospital No. 12
Kyiv, Ukraine
Kyiv City Clinical Hospital No. 7
Kyiv, Ukraine
Kyiv Regional Council "Kyiv Regional Clinical Hospital"
Kyiv, Ukraine
Kyiv City Clinical Hospital No. 9
Kyiv, Ukraine
Kyiv City Clinical Hospital No. 8
Kyiv, Ukraine