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M.A.S. Socket: A Transfemoral Revolution
By Miki Fairley The M.A.S.® socket design is an evolution--and perhaps
even a "revolution"--in the development of ischial containment (IC)
socket concepts. Since 1999, when Marlo Ortiz Vazquez del Mercado,
Ortiz Internacional, Jalisco, Mexico, first unveiled his new
design, it has continued to arouse interest throughout the O&P
worldwide community. Recently the design was featured in the
Thranhardt lecture series during the American Academy of Orthotists
& Prosthetists 2004 Annual Meeting and Scientific
Symposium.
The new design provides several clinical benefits: patients can
sit more comfortably; there is no plastic beneath the gluteus; the
prosthesis is easier to don; patients enjoy full range of motion,
better functional gait--and important to patients and family
members too--much better cosmesis. Seeing a video of patients
walking, sitting, and demonstrating the range of motion possible is
truly amazing.
Ortiz, who is a prosthetist and engineer, has fit
about 90 patients with the design to date. These patients
reportedly have had no difficulty in wearing the socket for long
periods of time. In fact, one amputee, due to his work schedule,
actually wore the socket for 28 straight hours with no
discomfort.
Agnes Curran, CP, OPGA prosthetist, pointed out that the design
seems to be surprisingly skin-friendly despite the intimately
fitting contours. Generally there is no skin irritation, and some
amputees who had worn previous prostheses found that existing skin
problems cleared up.
OPGA, Waterloo, Iowa, along with O&P1, Waterloo, hosted an
initial seminar in January 2004 in which Ortiz taught how to cast,
modify, and fit the design. An office worker who came with
prosthetists from Nebraska attending the first seminar served as
one of the patient models. She wore her check socket all the way
home to Nebraska and asked the prosthetists to come in over the
weekend to laminate it so she could begin wearing it immediately.
Another patient waited all day for his new socket rather than go
home with the old one. This patient enthusiasm is testimonial to
their acceptance of this new design.
Bob Tillges, CPO, FAAOP, Tillges Certified Orthotic Prosthetic
Inc., Maplewood, Minnesota, is enormously enthusiastic about the
new design. At the time of this writing, Tillges, who attended the
initial OPGA seminar, has fit nine amputees with the socket and is
in the process of fitting two more.
"All my patients have been very satisfied," he
said. "They have no discomfort; there's better ischial containment
and range of motion. In fact, one of my patients' wives called me
and said, "This is the most awesome prosthesis my husband has ever
worn! I can't even see it under his slacks." She added that it had
always bothered her before when her husband's prosthesis outline
was visible.
"I'm taking time to learn and understand the mechanics of
Marlo's system, and I'm getting very good results," Tillges added.
Although most of Ortiz's patients are younger, Tillges has a large
percentage of geriatric amputees. He has fit amputees aged from 44
to 81, including several in their 70s. Four of the 11 use some
auxiliary suspension, but the others use true suction suspension
only. "These sockets stay in total contact with flexion, extension,
adduction, and abduction," Tillges said. "Something that has always
bothered me as a professional is when you can see gapping, spaces,
or outline of the socket under clothing." Although many were
skeptical at first and thought the design would cause proximal
tissue roll development, Tillges said, "We have not experienced
that problem." He added, "With better ischial containment, you
reduce the amount of tension values needed for suction, get more
comfort, and achieve better suspension."
Tillges started his O&P career carving and fitting wood
sockets in the 1970s; he has seen socket technology develop through
30 years up to the present. Some iterations of the ischial
containment concept through the years have included the
quadrilateral "quad" socket shape taught by the O&P schools at
New York University (NYU), Northwestern, and the University of
California-Los Angeles (UCLA). Ivan Long, CP, developed his Long's
Line, and John Sabolich, CPO, came up with the Contoured Anterior
Trochanteric Controlled Alignment (CAT/CAM) method. Tillges feels
that Ortiz has gone beyond these in IC design excellence. He noted
how much his patients who have worn other socket designs appreciate
the new sockets: "No way do they want to go back to what they had
before." Tillges is also educating his company's residents and
young practitioners in the technique.
The Design: What Is It?
So, what is the M.A.S. socket? Ortiz describes his
design: "It is very important to consider the angle of the ischial
ramus. The ischial tuberosity and part of the ramus as well as the
medial aspect of the ramus are encapsulated within the
medial aspect of the socket brim." Generally, the medial
wall is lowered anteriorly to avoid pressure on the ascending
ramus; effectively ischioramal weight-bearing eliminates the need
for gluteal support, so those tissues can be excluded from the
socket, he explained.
In the conventional design, posterior trim lines include part of
the gluteus maximus. In the M.A.S. design, the height of the
posterior wall has been lowered to the gluteal fold, so the entire
muscle belly can be free of the socket. "This will not only improve
cosmesis but with this configuration, we have found that ischial
tuberosity and part of the ischial ramus are encapsulated more
effectively with no restriction in hip movement," Ortiz said.
"With the gluteal cutout, no weight bearing occurs
in this area, and weight-bearing forces are vectored from the
captured medial aspect of the ramus with a resultant force
projecting to the anterior/lateral area of the socket," explained
Al Pike, CP, in "A
New Concept in Above-Knee Socket Design" (The O&P
EDGE, November 2002).
What About CAD/CAM?
Can the design be adapted to CAD/CAM? Perhaps "down the road,"
is the answer. "The difficulty is not in measuring; it's in being
able to modify the complex individual anatomical shapes correctly,"
said Dennis Clark, CPO. However, he foresees a time when the
necessary tools can be incorporated into the CAD software to
accomplish the socket design.
"Once people under-stand all the concepts of the
design, they can identify what they are not getting from current
CAD tools--and then it will be easier to develop what's needed,"
said John Michael, CPO, FAAOP, who also participated in the January
seminar. Michael is a consultant to OPGA and is assisting in the
development of the course series.
Upcoming Seminars
Besides its initial seminar held in January, OPGA has scheduled
three additional two-day seminars in the fall of 2004. The three
dates set for 2004 are September 78, September 1011, and November
1213. Capacity is limited, said OPGA President Jim Andreassen; in
fact the September 1011 and November 1213 seminars are already
filled and only a few observer tiers are available for September
78. "The response has been outstanding, and OPGA is ready to bring
this amazing socket design to the prosthetic profession,"
Andreassen continued. "Because of the response, we have added
another course for April 12, 2005, and plan on offering additional
seminars in 2005 until everyone who would like to learn the design
has that opportunity. As long as there is interest, we will
continue to offer the seminars."
Two separate tiers will be offered for attendees: 1) a hands-on
course, in which prosthetists bring in their patients, and which
will include patient casting, modifications, and fitting of two
test sockets, and 2) "observers," who will be able to participate
in all classroom lectures, but not participate in the hands-on
patient aspects of the seminar. Attendance is limited to 30
participants: eight hands-on and 22 observers will be taught by
John Michael and Marlo Ortiz.
Is taking a course necessary? "It's a very impressive technique,
but not the easiest to do--you need hands-on practice," said
Michael.
Tillges also feels that taking a course is highly important for
success with the M.A.S. design, because it is unique and requires a
well-contoured fit, and could be difficult to learn
independently.
For more information about the M.A.S. Socket Design
Seminars, contact Jim Andreassen,jim.andreassen@vgm.com, or call
Kelly Weidman, 800.214.6742. 

Table Of Contents - June 2004
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