Amputees, Prosthetics and the TSA – TSA Amputee Guidelines

TSA amputee guidelinesTSA Amputee Guidelines
 
I have been asked a lot over the years about what to expect when traveling with a prosthesis. Having traveled quite a bit, both domestically and internationally, I have experienced a wide array of security protocols. I have gone through security check points all over Europe, the Middle East, Central America and at airports all over the United States, from small towns to large urban centers. Before traveling, it is always helpful to review the TSA’s amputee guidelines.

 

What I have found is that the security personnel are just as uncomfortable with the search as you.

 

Since a prosthesis is an unknown to many people, security personnel are cautious about hurting or making the traveler uncomfortable. For individuals wearing prosthetic devices, here are important things you need to know before going through security:

airport arrival TSA amputee guidelines

  • Security Officers will need to see and touch your prosthetic device as part of the screening process (this does not apply to mastectomy prostheses).

 

  • Security Officers will not ask nor require you to remove your prosthetic device, cast, or support brace. If they ever ask you to take it off, ask to speak to a supervisor as this is against TSA rules and regulations.

 

  • During the screening process, please do not remove or offer to remove your prosthetic device. You have the option of requesting a private screening at any time during the screening of your prosthetic device, cast or support brace.  In fact, I am often asked if I would like a private screening.  It is entirely up to you.

 

  • You have the right to refuse the offer of a private screening; however, you will need to allow the screening to be conducted publicly if you wish to proceed beyond the security checkpoint.

 

  • You may have a companion, assistant, or family member accompany and assist you into the private screening area (once he or she has been screened) and remain throughout the screening process.

 

  • TSA will make every effort to have two Security Officers of the same gender as the passenger being screened present during the private screening.  

 

  • If you are too weak or unstable on your feet to stand for a hand held metal inspection because of your prosthetic device, cast, or support brace, you may request to sit down after you have passed the walk through metal detector.

 

  • Please notify Security Officers if you need assistance during the screening process such as a hand, arm, or shoulder to lean upon, or a chair in which to sit. At any time during the screening process you can request a disposable paper drape for privacy.  

 

  • The Security Officer will describe the explosive trace sampling procedure in advance to help you along with the process. The explosive trace sampling process may require you to lift or raise some of your clothing in order to obtain the explosive trace sample. (Sampling areas can be accessed by you lifting your pant leg or shirtsleeve or by raising your skirt to knee-level.).  They typically just swap my prosthetic ankle or sometimes my prosthetic knee. 

 

  • If clothing will need to be lifted or raised in order to obtain the explosive trace sample. You will not be required to remove any clothing during the process or remove or display the belt that holds your prosthetic device to your body.

 

Your hands will also be swabbed. I flew out after working all day in the prosthetics lab and must have had traces of carbon and acetone on my hands because they had to perform the test multiple times. Not to mention, it required some explaining on my part.  So, make sure you wash your hands before going through the security checkpoint.

 

  • If the device alarms the explosive trace machine and the Security Officer cannot resolve the alarm, you will not be permitted through the security checkpoint.  To be safe, make sure your prosthesis is free of an suspected explosive materials.  If you work with chemicals vocationally please do your due diligence and research which chemicals the TSA tests and make sure your prosthesis and your body are free from those chemicals.

airport check-in TSA amputee guidelines

More information pertaining to the TSA amputee guidelines and screening of prosthetic devices, walkers, crutches, canes, augmentation devices, orthopedic shoes, support appliances, and other exterior medical devices, and dressings can be found on TSA’s website here: https://www.tsa.gov/travel/special-procedures

 

Finally, if you feel you are being treated inappropriately,  not in accordance with TSA amputee guidelines and regulations, you have the right to request that a supervisor be present. If you are still unsatisfied with the supervisor, you also have the right to request a TSA Customer Service Manager (CSM). There is a CSM in every airport, and if requested, they will come to the screening area and answer any questions or concerns you may have, including questions about procedures or fair and respectful treatment. Any TSA Officers found not to be complying with TSA rules and regulations or not treating passengers with respect will receive additional training in the future.

 

To get updated information about the TSA’s procedures and the TSA amputee guidelines, you can visit their website here at http://www.tsa.gov. The above information is taken directly from the Transportation Security Administration’s website, and we encourage you to use the TSA as a resource before, during, and after you fly.

 

*information courtesy of the Amputee Coalition of America.  

Travel safely!

Let’s Talk About Amputee Socks – Volume Management For The Amputee

amputee socks. con moto prosthetics

LET’S TALK ABOUT SOCKS – AMPUTEE SOCKS

 

Yes, let’s talk about amputee socks (for those of you in skin fit suspension systems this will not apply to you). Maybe it will bring back memories of when you used socks, or who knows, maybe a future prosthesis will require socks. Read along and enjoy.

 

Amputee socks. Yes the dreaded words that all amputees (well most) have to endure.

 

Socks will provide comfort. Socks will help wick sweat from a sweaty limb. Socks will tighten up a loose fit. Socks are just a part of amputee life.  

 

I have found in my years of being a prosthetist, amputee sock ply management education is the topic de jour, a conversation I have multiple times a day, and sometimes multiple times with the same person. It can require a learning curve for some users – and that is ok. Below are the main points to remember:

 

  • Socks are a tool to manage your residual limb volume (size). This means that as your limb changes volume throughout the day the socks act as a filler between you and the socket. Remember, your limb will change sizes throughout the day. We tend to be more swollen in the morning and the swelling reduces after a few hours of being up and walking around. I know, I go through this personally, in the morning my socket fits much tighter than it does mid-day. After 1-2 hours of walking around my volume goes down and I start to feel much more comfortable. This happens to everybody. Don’t worry! This even happened to you before you were an amputee. The same principle applies to rings on your fingers.  Do you ever find that your rings tend to fit a little tighter in the morning than they did when you went to bed?  Do they take a little more effort to get over your knuckle in the morning? That is because there is more fluid in your extremities in the morning. After getting up and walking around the fluid will move up through your lymphatic system and your rings will have a normal fit again, and so will your socket.

 

  • Amputee socks come in different sizes, thicknesses, and even colors. For thickness (ply), socks usually have a number or a colored band at the top of the sock indicating its ply. Socks are the cornerstone of volume management. It doesn’t matter whether you like using them or not, you need them. As prosthetists, we will do our best to adjust the socket shape to minimize how many socks you wear, but we can not control your physiology. We can not change biology. We can do a lot, but we are limited in our super powers.

 

  • If you are not wearing enough socks, you may feel pain at the bottom of your limb or at your knee cap. Try putting on a thicker sock and see if that helps. If you have too much sock ply on, you will feel like the prosthesis is too tight and you can’t reach the bottom. Your prosthesis will also feel too tall. This is because with too much sock ply, your limb is not seated flush and snug in the socket. It is sitting up higher than it should, thus creating the sensation that the prosthesis is too tall.

 

  • Always carry socks with you. If you carry a purse, stuff some socks in there. If you don’t carry a purse, buy a bag to carry with you like a backpack, fanny pack, messenger bag, etc. If you have a car, put socks in your glove compartment or center console.  Keep a stash in your desk at work.  Please make sure socks of varying ply are easily accessible to you throughout the day.

 

Contact your prosthetist if you have questions regarding socks or if you need more.  You can always order online here if you prefer.

Good luck and may the socks be with you.

 

 

It’s Getting Hot In Here – Amputee Perspiration

thermometer gage, con moto prosthetics
thermometer gage, con moto prosthetics
photo © copyright AJC1 Flickr

IT’S GETTING HOT IN HERE! 

Amputee Perspiration

When an amputee starts to get hot and perspire in their prosthesis, the best course of action is to find some way to keep their skin as dry as possible. Amputees experience great discomfort and difficulty when they are out in the community and start to get skin irritation due to sweat. Finding a private area (bathroom, changing room) is not always agreeable to the circumstance, so here are some suggestions to help keep the residual limb dry and healthy.

When a patient starts to get hot and sweaty in their socket the best course of action is find some way to keep the skin as dry as possible.

  • Unscented, spray-on antiperspirant. Spray an antiperspirant on your residual limb prior to donning the prosthesis. Use only unscented, as scented may cause skin irritation.
  • Cornstarch. This was suggested to me by a German prosthetist in the 1980’s. Thank you, Roland Doetzer! Take a little bit of cornstarch and rub it over the residuum (just a light coat), then don the prosthesis. I used this technique recently on a young man who lives in a very warm climate. He was experiencing a small area of itchy redness that looked rash-like in an area of invagination. He started adding a small amount of cornstarch over that area before donning the liner. This effectively eliminated the itchy redness. I ascertained that the rash was caused by sweat pooling in the bottom of the liner and eventually causing irritation. The cornstarch kept the limb dry and acted as a barrier. If this area had been caused by an allergic reaction, cornstarch would have no impact on it and the itchiness would have persisted. If an amputee is experiencing areas of itchy redness, discoloration and/or bumpiness have him or her consult a doctor, as this may be an allergic reaction.
  • Use a thin nylon sheath (a prosthetist can provide one, or you can order here. An article from 1974, discusses the benefits of sheaths as a perspiration wick.
  • Drysol. A prescription antiperspirant containing aluminum chloride hexahydrate that works by affecting the cells that produce sweat. This route is usually traveled when no other option works. This product was created for people with hyperhidrosis. I have only ever met a handful of people who have used this product. For most amputees, the other mentioned options tend to fix the problem enough to where sweat is a nuisance, but tolerable.
  • Certain-Dri. An over-the-counter antiperspirant. Similar to Drysol, however a prescription is not necessary. If you have a patient who in interested in either of them, please ask them to speak with their doctor and make sure they are a good candidate for these items. With residual limb tissue it is imperative that amputees are extra cautious about what gets applied to their limb.

Should amputees experience heat-related issues, ask them to consult their doctor and prosthetist.