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  • Re: amputee sprinter

    I'm not an expert on this particular topic, but I am familiar with the
    area.

    I was wondering when I'd hear a story to this effect. I've heard that
    prosthetic feet have gotten so good that bilateral transtibial amputees
    would soon be able to run faster than the best non-amputees.

    The quote listed in the original message makes Mr. Pistorius sound like
    he has a bit of a persecution complex- what would the IAAF have against
    him in particular? Their intention is to keep the competition fair, but
    they should not ban him from the competition without some kind of proof
    that his feet provide an advantage. Their decision should be based on
    science rather than supposition, because Oscar Pistorius deserves a
    chance and because he will not be the last world-class amputee runner.
    If energy storing feet do provide an advantage they could be de-tuned to
    physiological levels (adding damping and/or mass) based on the
    experimental data in order to allow amputees and non-amputees to compete
    on a level playing field.

    Does anyone working in running energetics and/or prosthetics have any
    insight to add? Is there any pertinent data in existence that the IAAF
    could use? Is there any chance of data before the Summer of 2008? Please
    post any replies to the Listserv- this could be an interesting
    discussion.

    Brian Schulz, Ph.D.
    Program Specialist
    VISN 8 Patient Safety Research Center (118M) James A. Haley Veterans'
    Hospital
    11605 North Nebraska Ave.
    Tampa, FL 33612-5738
    Phone: (813) 558-3944
    Fax: (813) 558-3990
    www.patientsafetycenter.com

    -----Original Message-----
    From: * Biomechanics and Movement Science listserver
    [mailto:BIOMCH-L@NIC.SURFNET.NL] On Behalf Of Ton van den Bogert
    Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2007 10:59 AM
    To: BIOMCH-L@NIC.SURFNET.NL
    Subject: [BIOMCH-L] amputee sprinter

    Yesterday's New York Times had an article about a double amputee from
    South
    Africa who runs 100 m in 10.9 seconds and appears to be still improving.

    There is debate whether he should be allowed to run in the 2008
    Olympics, if
    he qualifies.

    The IAAF says that his energy-storing feet are an unfair advantage.
    Others
    say they are not, since they only return 80% of the energy. There are
    calls
    for further research.

    The athlete, Oscar Pistorius, said "I think they're afraid to do the
    research.
    They're afraid of what they're going to find, that I don't have an
    advantage
    and they'll have to let me compete."

    What do the Biomch-L subscribers think? I know we have some subscribers
    who
    are experts on this topic.

    The full article is here:
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/sports/othersports/15runner.html

    --

    Ton van den Bogert, Biomch-L co-moderator
    http://www.Biomch-L.org

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