TV infomercials offer a world of potential solutions for back pain, but most of them have at least one of three problems — they’re unproven, unworkable or just plain unattractive. A team of Vanderbilt University engineers is changing that with a design that combines the science of biomechanics and advances in wearable tech to create a smart, mechanized undergarment.
A performance-boosting super-suit is low-profile enough to fit underneath clothing (Joe Howell / Vanderbilt)Their device gets its U.S. debut Aug. 8-11 at an American Society of Biomechanics conference in Boulder, Colorado. The team unveiled itlast week at the Congress of the International Society of Biomechanics in Brisbane, Australia, garnering a Young Investigator Award for mechanical engineering Ph.D. student Erik Lamers (left), who helped develop the design.

Well over half of all adults will experience low back pain in their lifetimes, and the condition is estimated to cost $30 billion in medical expenses and more than $100 billion in lost productivity in the U.S. annually. Karl Zelik, assistant professor of mechanical engineering and the principal investigator on the project, experienced back pain himself repeatedly lifting his toddler son, which he said got him thinking about wearable tech solutions.

“I’m sick of Tony Stark and Bruce Wayne being the only ones with performance-boosting supersuits. We, the masses, want our own,” Zelik said. “The difference is that I’m not fighting crime. I’m fighting the odds that I’ll strain my back this week trying to lift my 2-year-old.”

Wiper party leader Kalonzo Musyoka has urged voters in his home county – Kitui – not to let him down during tomorrow’s General Election and vote for all his party candidates.

“Since I will be the Deputy President of Kenya after the August 8 polls, failing to give me a Wiper governor, senator, woman representative, MPs and MCAs will make me appear like a man who is immaculately dressed in a suit but without underwear,” he said.

He addressed a rally at the Kyuso Stadium in his former Mwingi North constituency on Saturday. Present were NASA co-principals Moses Wetang’ula, Kitui Governor Julius Malombe and Wiper Mwingi North MP candidate Paul Nzengu.

Kalonzo urged voters to adopt the six-piece vote pattern.

He told residents to start by voting in NASA presidential candidate Raila Odinga then vote for Wiper candidates for all other positions. Kalonzo said independents and Jubilee Party candidates must be rejected.

The device is designed so that users engage it only when they need it. A simple double tap to the shirt engages the straps. When the task is done, another double tap releases the straps so the user can sit down, and the device feels and behaves like normal clothes. The device also can be controlled by an app that the team created—users tap their phones to engage the smart clothing wirelessly via Bluetooth.

back of suit showing supportsThe back of Karl Zelik and Erik Lamers’ performance-boosting super-suit (Joe Howell / Vanderbilt)
Eight subjects tested the device leaning forward and lifting 25-pound and 55-pound weights while holding their position at 30, 60 and 90 degrees. Using motion capture, force plates and electromyography, Zelik’s team demonstrated that the device reduced
activity in the lower back extensor muscles by an average of 15 to 45 percent for each
task.

“The next idea is: Can we use sensors embedded in the clothing to monitor stress on the low back, and if it gets too high, can we automatically engage this smart clothing?” Zelik said.

People are often trying to capitalize on a huge societal problem with devices that are unproven or of health care workers or other professionals with jobs that require standing or leaning for long periods. Smart clothing may help offload some of those forces and reduce muscle fatigue.”

The project is funded by a Vanderbilt University Discovery Grant, a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship and a National Institutes of Health Career Development Award K12HD073945. A patent has been filed.

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