Giving the world a helping hand: Students design 3D printed prosthetics

e-NABLE workshop participants in Davis Hall.

Andrew Olewnik (center) and students at an e-NABLE workshop in Davis Hall. Participants were taught how to assemble and test previously printed parts of prosthetic hands for children. Photo credit: Doug Levere.

By Nicole Capozziello

Published July 31, 2020

Each year, thousands of people around the world lose a hand or finger, often due to accidents, war, natural disaster or illness.  

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“Engineering intramurals and e-NABLE have given me a newfound love and interest in 3D printing, as well as furthered my interest in prosthetics and orthopedics as a career.”
Alyssabeth Czajkowski, senior
Department of Biomedical Engineering

After this loss, accessing and affording traditional prosthetic devices can present their own challenge to these individuals, who are often in developing countries with limited medical care.

A group of undergraduate students in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences recently aspired to fill this gap, putting their knowledge, creativity and resources to use as an engineering intramural activity and creating a campus chapter of e-NABLE – an online global community of 30,000 volunteers who use 3D printers to make free and low-cost prosthetic upper limb devices for adults and children in need. 

“Over the last few years, we’ve been experimenting with 3D printed prosthetics, which is what e-NABLE is all about,” says Andrew Olewnik, Director of Experiential Learning Programs in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and an assistant professor in the Department of Engineering Education. “Working with e-NABLE provided cool opportunities for students to apply engineering work and contribute to that community.”

Part of the school’s Experiential Learning Programs, an engineering intramural is any problem-based extracurricular project that provides students with a real-world learning experience. The school has been partnering with e-NABLE on various intramural projects since 2018.

This past spring, a group of students teamed up to explore different aspects of the 3D printed prosthetics process. Over the course of the semester, four teams focused on different projects: designing a pre-prosthetic forearm that can have various hand attachments to perform a variety of tasks; testing upper limb prosthetics to assure that the designs meet appropriate specifications and metrics; developing a bill of materials and instruction manual for assembling a 3D printed hand and ideal conditions for printing; and analyzing and improving the methods of parameterization when a patient is remotely measured for their preferred prosthetic, which is scaled before printing and delivering.

“Engineering intramurals and e-NABLE have given me a newfound love and interest in 3D printing, as well as furthered my interest in prosthetics and orthopedics as a career,” says Alyssabeth Czajkowski, a senior biomedical engineering major and a team project manager.

Czajkowski’s team addressed the challenge of creating an upper limb pre-prosthetic (also known as an interim prosthetic). Patients may wait a long time for their final prosthetic; during this time, a pre-prosthetic, such as e-NABLE’s Unlimbited Arm design, is crucial for both rehab and getting the patient adjusted to using a prosthetic. After printing their designs, the students hope to work in conjunction with the Erie County Medical Center to test their models in real-life scenarios.

While the projects were challenging before the coronavirus pandemic, when the teams went remote in March, they had to be particularly creative.

“When we lost access to the labs and were unable to carry out some of the testing that we had planned, we determined that we needed to come up with a new approach that could be carried out remotely,” says Sabrina Sleasman, an intramural participant and an incoming junior in the Department of Biomedical Engineering. “We had to ask: how can we still test these remotely?” For her team, which focused on test engineering 3D printed prosthetics, the answer lay in developing an analytical model, which was a new experience for all of the group members.

3D printed hand.

The test hand made by the production optimization group, Ruby Acquah, Angelique Jan Miane, Jason Yin, Wilson Jo and Jui Naik.

The University at Buffalo became an official chapter of e-NABLE this spring. With the help of Olewnik, Eric Paccione and Czajkowski, the chapter leads, spent the fall semester researching the requirements of becoming an e-NABLE community chapter, brainstorming project ideas and seeking out students to begin the chapter. 

“One of the requirements was to print a ‘test hand’ to show our competence with 3D printing and assembling e-NABLE designs,” says Paccione, a senior biomedical engineering major and team project manager. “This led to our chapter hosting its first workshop and interest meeting where we had already 3D printed the parts, and we had groups of students work to assemble hands.”

e-NABLE@UB is in the process of developing more projects for the fall semester, in collaboration with UB’s Experiential Learning Network and students and faculty in other disciplines. 

“One of the things that makes the e-NABLE community so great is the opportunity to bring in fields other than engineering,” say Czajkowski and Paccione. “The prosthetic field itself requires collaboration across the medical field such as rehabilitation/physical therapy and public health, in addition to engineering. Becoming a more interdisciplinary group provides ample opportunity for students to grow accustomed to working alongside people with different skill sets and interests.”

The e-NABLE community has over 140 e-NABLE chapters and hundreds of schools participating in their mission of making free 3D printed hands for those in need, using open-source and low-cost designs. 

“What I like most about the projects we do is that our end results can reach much further than UB. With the community chapter network and e-NABLE forum, we are able to share what we do directly with people around the world who are working on similar projects, contributing to a greater body of knowledge,” says Paccione.

In addition to Czajkowski, Paccione and Sleasman, Ruby Acquah, Connor Bittlingmaier, Huy Dang, Sovannrith Em, Jeff Joseph, Taylor Marabella, Marsha Maredia, Angelique Miane, Preethi Sivaswaamy Mohana, Sreeja Morishetty, Jui Mahendra Naik (project manager), Daniel Pardo, Taylor Quinn, Anthony Romeo, Wilson David Jo Siu (project manager), Rachael Warren, Elise Williamson and Jason Yin participated in the e-NABLE projects during the spring semester. Graduate students Elakkiya Jayaraman and Aliakbar Eranpurwala served as project mentors. In addition, Filip Stefanovic and Mark Ehrensberger, faculty members in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, and the 3D Printing Working Group collaborated with the students.

To learn more about the e-NABLE@UB Community Chapter or to get involved, contact Eric Paccione or Alyssabeth Czajkowski.

About the SEAS Intramural Program

The School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Engineering Intramural program sponsors a number of projects each year. The projects are intended to be resume builders and give students an opportunity to apply what they learn to solve a real problem on behalf of a client.

Industry partners, community organizations and faculty/staff/students are encouraged to submit problems for consideration. Learn more about the process here or contact Melinda Somerville, experiential learning business development assistant, to discuss further.