TY - JOUR
T1 - 3UPS Parallel Mechanism for Passive Rehabilitation of Lateral Ankle Sprains in Ball Sport Athletes
AU - Gonzalez-Dancourt, Dario
AU - Huamanchahua, Deyby
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institutions. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This work focuses on designing and developing a 3UPS parallel mechanism for passive rehabilitation of lateral ankle sprains in ball sport athletes. The study analyzes the high incidence of this musculoskeletal injury and its functional and social impact. The proposed mechanism seeks to accurately replicate the physiological movements of the ankle through the integration of advanced inverse kinematics methods and screw theory. The required ranges of motion were defined to ensure a proper and safe recovery. The results show that the mechanism fully achieves the physiological ranges required: dorsiflexion-plantarflexion from 30° to –20°, abduction-adduction from 10° to –10°, and eversion-inversion from 20° to –10°. Moreover, the workspace analysis demonstrated adequate coverage in both positional and orientational domains, with vertical displacements ranging from 0.01 m to 0.2717 m, and maximum achievable angles of ±61.00° for ψ, from 24.77° to –18.72° for θ, and ±22.35° for φ. Likewise, the singularity analysis initially revealed 22 critical position configurations and 44 for orientation, which were reduced to 12 and 14 after eliminating redundancies. Importantly, all singularities lie outside the effective workspace. This development provides an accessible, robust, and efficient solution for improving rehabilitation and preventing future complications such as chronic ankle instability.
AB - This work focuses on designing and developing a 3UPS parallel mechanism for passive rehabilitation of lateral ankle sprains in ball sport athletes. The study analyzes the high incidence of this musculoskeletal injury and its functional and social impact. The proposed mechanism seeks to accurately replicate the physiological movements of the ankle through the integration of advanced inverse kinematics methods and screw theory. The required ranges of motion were defined to ensure a proper and safe recovery. The results show that the mechanism fully achieves the physiological ranges required: dorsiflexion-plantarflexion from 30° to –20°, abduction-adduction from 10° to –10°, and eversion-inversion from 20° to –10°. Moreover, the workspace analysis demonstrated adequate coverage in both positional and orientational domains, with vertical displacements ranging from 0.01 m to 0.2717 m, and maximum achievable angles of ±61.00° for ψ, from 24.77° to –18.72° for θ, and ±22.35° for φ. Likewise, the singularity analysis initially revealed 22 critical position configurations and 44 for orientation, which were reduced to 12 and 14 after eliminating redundancies. Importantly, all singularities lie outside the effective workspace. This development provides an accessible, robust, and efficient solution for improving rehabilitation and preventing future complications such as chronic ankle instability.
KW - 3UPS
KW - ankle sprains
KW - geometric method
KW - inverse kinematics
KW - screw theory
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105019314172
U2 - 10.18687/LACCEI2025.1.1.1089
DO - 10.18687/LACCEI2025.1.1.1089
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:105019314172
SN - 2414-6390
JO - Proceedings of the LACCEI international Multi-conference for Engineering, Education and Technology
JF - Proceedings of the LACCEI international Multi-conference for Engineering, Education and Technology
IS - 2025
T2 - 23rd LACCEI International Multi-Conference for Engineering, Education and Technology, LACCEI 2025
Y2 - 16 July 2025 through 18 July 2025
ER -