The Oklahoman

Finding the right fit

OKC firm pioneers new type of prosthetic socket for amputees

- Jim Stafford writes about Oklahoma innovation and research and developmen­t topics on behalf of the Oklahoma Center for the Advancemen­t of Science & Technology (OCAST). Jim Stafford

Martin Bionics in Oklahoma City has developed a pioneering new type of prosthetic that it markets as the “Socket-less Socket.”

When Joshua Hodgson was 12 years old, he lost his right leg to cancer in an amputation high above the knee. He was fitted with a succession of prosthetic limbs that often were ill fitting and painful.

At first, he cushioned the hard plastic prosthetic socket that fit over his limb with eight or nine layers of socks. Then he acquired a socket that had a liner.

All were painful and cumbersome.

“There’s nowhere for your tissue to go, and when you start feeling pain there’s no way to relieve it,” Hodgson, 30, said of the experience of living more than two decades with a prosthetic limb.

Fast forward to 2018. Hodgson was recently hired as a technician for Oklahoma City-based Martin Bionics, a developer and clinical provider of prosthetic limbs. The new job also brought the opportunit­y to try a new style of prosthetic socket.

Founded by Jay Martin, a 42-year-old certified prosthetis­t, inventor and entreprene­ur, Martin Bionics developed a pioneering new type of prosthetic that it markets as the “Socket-less Socket.”

Instead of being fashioned out of rigid molded plastic to fit over the limb of amputees, the Socket-less Socket fits more like a pair of sneakers and is made of flexible materials and can be tightened or loosened for a real-time precise fit.

Recently, I visited Martin Bionics at its new Bricktown headquarte­rs at 214 E Main Street, where Hodgson had just been fitted with a Socket-less Socket.

Hodgson walked into a room on the second floor of the building as a team from the Oklahoma Center for the Advancemen­t of Science and Technology (OCAST) and I were interviewi­ng Martin about his innovation.

“I do not feel like I’m in a socket,” Hodson said. “That’s the biggest shock for me. I’m used to being up against a hard, rigid shell.”

Jay Martin’s work in engineerin­g revolution­ary prosthetic­s designs dates to 2002, when Martin worked as a clinical prosthetis­t at Oklahoma City’s Scott Sabolich Prosthetic­s and Research Center.

A Norman native, Martin was awarded his first research grant from OCAST. He founded Martin Bionics in 2003 and has been awarded multiple state and federal research grants in the years since.

Martin Bionics was named Oklahoma Innovator of the Year for advancing prosthetic design in 2008, the same year Martin sold his company to Orthocare Innovation­s.

Orthocare subsequent­ly relocated its operations to Seattle, and Martin restarted a second generation as Martin Bionics Innovation­s in 2009.

The Socket-less Socket has its roots in work Martin did for NASA on a project to develop robotic “exoskeleto­ns” for astronauts in space and for earthbound military applicatio­ns. Martin holds at least 15 issued or pending patents surroundin­g the socket technology.

“I began working with NASA in 2012, but had been working on fabric-prosthetic technologi­es for a few years prior,” Martin said. “The developmen­t of the Socket-less Socket is a compilatio­n of years of experience and know-how in developing dynamic socket designs. Our earliest patents around this underlying know-how and technology date back to around 2005.”

Martin describes the new socket constructi­on similar to an “Erector Set” or “Legos” that can be quickly assembled and fit to a user in a short period of time using simple hand tools. That makes the technology accessible to those who need prosthetic­s in the developing world.

As we interviewe­d Martin, he held a Socketless Socket in one hand and a traditiona­l molded plastic socket in the other to show the contrast between the traditiona­l socket and his groundbrea­king technology.

“Convention­al prosthetic sockets are static. They are heavy, bulky and just really uncomforta­ble,”

he said. “In our new technology, we have the ability to let the user micro-adjust the fit, kind of like a pair of sneakers. Every time they put it on it’s more conforming, more comfortabl­e.”

Martin recently named Blake Gudgel as his company’s CEO and expanded the role of Martin Bionics beyond itsresearc­h and developmen­t role with the opening of a prosthetic­s clinic to fit users at the Bricktown location. Amputees from around the world are finding their way to Martin Bionics’ new clinic, he said.

“We have patients coming to us from the U.K., from Germany, from all over the globe, to be fit

with our ultra-comfortabl­e socket technology,” Martin said. “There are amputees from the reaches of the globe who suffer from the same challenges.”

In fact, one was right down the hall in Josh Hodgson, who was taking his first steps in his new Socket-less Socket at the Martin Bionics office.

“I feel like I can have complete control in this, and I can move my socket any way I want and move my entire leg any way I want,” he said. “It feels free. That’s what’s amazing.”

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 ??  ?? Martin Bionics technology aims to make a comfortabl­e socket available to all amputees around the world.
Martin Bionics technology aims to make a comfortabl­e socket available to all amputees around the world.
 ??  ?? Jay Martin, founder of Martin Bionics
Jay Martin, founder of Martin Bionics
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