Can Shoulder Impairments Be Classified From 3-Dimensional Kinematics Using Inertial Sensors?

Author:

Mazuquin Bruno1ORCID,Gill Karl Peter12ORCID,Monga Puneet3ORCID,Selfe James1ORCID,Richards Jim4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Professions, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, United Kingdom

2. Department of Physiotherapy, Northern Care Alliance NHS Group, Fairfield General Hospital, Bury, United Kingdom

3. Wrightington Hospital, Wigan, Lancashire, United Kingdom

4. Allied Health Research Unit, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United Kingdom

Abstract

Inertial sensors may help clinicians to assess patients’ movement and potentially support clinical decision making. Our aim was to determine whether shoulder range of motion during movement tasks measured using inertial sensors is capable of accurately discriminating between patients with different shoulder problems. Inertial sensors were used to measure 3-dimensional shoulder motion during 6 tasks of 37 patients on the waiting list for shoulder surgery. Discriminant function analysis was used to identify whether the range of motion of different tasks could classify patients with different shoulder problems. The discriminant function analysis could correctly classify 91.9% of patients into one of the 3 diagnostic groups based. The tasks that associated a patient with a particular diagnostic group were the following: subacromial decompression: abduction, rotator cuff repair of tears ≤5 cm: flexion and rotator cuff repair of tears >5 cm: combing hair, abduction, and horizontal abduction–adduction. The discriminant function analysis showed that range of motion measured by inertial sensors can correctly classify patients and could be used as a screening tool to support surgery planning.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Biophysics

Reference19 articles.

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