For professionals
A design approach focused on the body,
not only on offloading.
This page is intended for professionals who wish to assess, beyond the sole function of support, how certain design features may affect the tolerance of a walking aid: integrated shock absorption, contact comfort, more progressive load transfer and a smoother movement sequence.

This is not meant as a sales argument, but as a use-based reading of the product.
“Because progress did not stop yesterday… today, we can do better.”
CLINICAL ATTENTION
What deserves clinical attention
Standard crutches fulfil an offloading function. However, they can transfer a significant share of mechanical stress to the upper limbs: repeated impacts, localised pressure, faster fatigue, a less fluid gait pattern, and reduced tolerance when use is prolonged.
From this perspective, the value of a crutch is not based only on its ability to provide support, but also on how it is designed.
DESIGN
Design principles

Integrated shock absorption
Reduce the sharp, repetitive nature of impacts transmitted with each step.

Ergonomic gel handgrip
Improve contact comfort and limit overly concentrated pressure zones.

Smoother movement sequence
Support a less abrupt, more continuous support phase, often better tolerated in daily use.

Use tolerance
Improve tolerance of the walking aid when repeated loading continues over time.
MECHANICS
Absorb, then assist the next movement
A mechanically relevant support phase does not simply absorb force. The shock absorber also contributes to the return of movement. Contact feels less abrupt, the next step is smoother, and energy is less brutally dissipated.
The aim is not to transform walking with crutches, but to modify certain mechanical characteristics: a less abrupt support phase, a more regular progression, and less harsh loading on the upper limbs.
RELEVANCE
Relevant contexts
These crutches may be of particular interest when the issue is not limited to moving from one place to another, but also includes the functional tolerance of the walking aid.
Recovery
When crutch use lasts beyond a few days and support comfort becomes a real factor in adherence.
Intensive or repeated use
When repeated support cycles make impacts, fatigue and comfort more decisive.
Upper-body sensitivity
For patients whose hands, wrists, shoulders or arms quickly become limiting with standard crutches.
HONESTY
What this page does not claim
This page does not replace clinical assessment, medical instructions or individualised selection of a walking aid.
It makes a more modest point: the design of a crutch influences how the body tolerates it. And that variable deserves serious attention when a patient needs to walk with crutches beyond very short-term use.
Would you like to go further?
Explore what changes in more detail, or contact us to discuss it.

