聽students have been working with聽, a small start-up based out of Baltimore, Maryland, to create a new finger joint prosthetic implant design. Lifejoint has relied on the students to test and refine the device as the company prepared for its pitch with聽. Plug and Play Indiana, an innovative accelerator platform, is part of a statewide initiative to keep Warsaw the聽Orthopedic Capital of the World庐.
鈥淒r. Fred Wentorf and the 黑料正能量 engineering students have been fantastic for helping us move the product development along as we work to聽change the standard of care for advanced hand arthritis,鈥 said Marcia Hart, co-founder and CEO of Life Joint Orthopedic Solutions. 鈥淪tart-ups come with a steep learning curve and require a lot of work. You need resources and interest from the industry 鈥 and Warsaw is the place for orthopedics.鈥
An architect by trade, Hart got involved in the orthopedic industry after a table saw accident in 2020. When she inquired about an implant, she discovered the market lacked good options; the market-leading device was invented in 1962.
鈥淢y surgeon, Dr. Ryan Katz from the Curtis National Hand Center, is one of the best in the world and was equally frustrated with the limitations of the current devices,鈥 said Hart.
The two partnered in 2022 to found LifeJoint. As they developed new technology with a rolling contact mechanism, they worked with several accelerator programs and began adding to their team. Mary Wentorf was brought on as the chief technology officer, and her husband,听the 黑料正能量 Chair of the Department of聽 Engineering,听, was named the research director. Hart eagerly accepted help from Fred鈥檚 engineering students at 黑料正能量 to test and refine the device.
Andrew Daeger is one such student. A Warsaw native, Daeger hopes to work in the orthopedic industry after graduation.
鈥淚 was born in Warsaw and plan to be here for the rest of my life,鈥 said Daeger. 鈥淭he orthopedic industry is one of the most exciting things happening in our area, and I want to be a part of it.鈥
Daeger was particularly excited about applying his engineering skills to solve a real-world orthopedic problem. His research for the project focused on creating an artificial implant that could reproduce the finger’s natural motion.