Background
The development of foot ulceration in diabetes is multifactorial with known risk factors including neuropathy, vascular disease and biomechanical factors. Offloading the at-risk foot with footwear and foot orthoses is known to reduce the risk of ulceration but often adherence is low and efficacy is variable. Harnessing the capabilities of computer aided design and manufacture presents an opportunity to optimize pressure reduction and personalize the footwear and insole to enhance both ulcer prevention and user experience. In this DIALECT project we go beyond the state-of-the-art and design, manufacture and test novel off-loading devices exploiting machine learning and additive manufacturing techniques to provide personalised solutions.
Approach
The doctoral candidate will explore, design, manufacture and test through new paradigms of machine learning, computer-aided design and manufacturing, and additive manufacturing, beyond state-of-the-art custom-made insoles for people with diabetes who are at moderate-to-high-risk for ulcer development. Development will be through in-shoe pressure and usability analyses comparing current and optimized designs and a clinical validation study of final designs in moderate-risk people with diabetes. The candidate will create new design rules that exploit freeform opportunities with additive manufacturing and use machine learning techniques for individual patient optimization. Using in-vivo validation experiments the doctoral candidate will determine pressure offloading efficacy and usability of novel insole products. These advances will create new knowledge to optimise harmful pressure reduction and ulcer prevention.
Secondments will take place at IOR to conduct research on biomechanical-driven CAD design orthotic optimisation and early prototype development and testing; at FFY for research on orthotic design, CAD-CAM technologies and materials for devices utilising 3D printing and CNC for manufacturing, and training of the doctoral candidate on novel additive manufacturing systems and commercialisation of orthotic products and services; and at T3D for essential industrial-based training in insole design automation and additive manufacturing for footwear orthotics.
Our Research Team
Glasgow Caledonian University’s research is framed around the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. The candidate successful candidate will join the Musculoskeletal Health Research Group, an inter-disciplinary research group of health professionals, human movement scientists and engineers. Working across the School of Health and Life Sciences and the School of Computing, Engineering and Built Environment the candidate will learn from, and collaborate with, a multi-disciplinary group of researchers with expertise in foot and ankle biomechanics and engineering with a successful track record in European training networks. The candidate will have access to (1) State-of-the-art Human Performance Laboratories; (2) CAD/CAM, Computer Aided Design, and Manufacturing tools together with 3D modeling and analysis software packages. Further other mechanical, 3D printing, and material testing laboratories; (3) materials selection (Granta Edupack) software and (4) strategic academic-health partnerships provides access to the NHS and associated clinical expertise.
External supervision in this project comes from DIALECT Co-ordinator at the Academic Medical Centre (AMC), Amsterdam, one of the foremost research institutions in the Netherlands. The AMC is renowned for research on the diabetic foot with leading roles in the International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot and leading several multicentre nationwide trials. Industry input will be delivered byTaika3D, Finland, an SME working in the field of CAD bespoke orthotic and prosthetic devices with extensive experience in product development, additive manufacturing and CAD and design system development.
Glasgow Caledonian University
Glasgow Caledonian University’s research is framed around the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. We address the Goals through our applied research via three major societal challenge areas of inclusive societies, healthy lives and sustainable environments. We have a number of thematic interdisciplinary research centres underpinned by several research groups and an inter-sectoral approach to addressing societal challenges locally and internationally (see here for more info). GCU is a modern Scottish university with over 20,000 students and 1,600 staff from more than 100 countries. GCU is the top modern university in Scotland by research power (REF 2021) and is in the top 15 in the UK for allied health research (REF 2021), 91% of our health research has been classed as world-leading and internationally excellent, and our health research impact is ranked 2nd in the UK. It is a leading UK recipient of Erasmus+ research funding to support education, training, youth and sport in Europe. GCU generates nearly £1billion worth of economic and social benefit for the UK economy every year and more than £880million to the Scottish economy annually.
Doctoral Candidate
Niloofar Sedighi
Recruiting organisation: Glasgow Caledonian University, Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow, G4 0BA
Hosts: Dr. Patricia Munoz de Escalona, Dr. Ruth Barn
Duration: 36 months
Secondments: Istituto Orthopedico Rizzoli, Bologna, Italy (2 months); Firefly, Sligo, Ireland (2 months); Taika3D, Finland (1 month).
Summary: Diabetes-related foot ulceration is associated with biomechanical risk factors including foot deformity and increased plantar pressures. Management of these risk factors includes reducing elevated plantar pressures through customised footwear and insoles, but adherence and efficacy is variable. In this project, the doctoral candidate will explore, design, manufacture and experimentally test novel additive manufactured foot orthoses exploiting freeform design and manufacture capabilities and employing machine learning to optimise off-loading providing personalised interventions aimed at preventing foot ulceration.