Abstract
Wearable sensors offer the opportunity for patients to perform a self-assessment of their function with respect to a variety of movement exercises. Corresponding commercial products have the potential to change the communication between patients and physiotherapists during the recovery process. Even if they turn out to be user-friendly, there remains the question to what degree the numerical results are reliable and comparable with those obtained by assessment methods traditionally used. To address this question for one specific recently developed and commercially available sensor, a method comparison study was performed. The sensor-based assessment of eight movement parameters was compared with an assessment of the same parameters based on test procedures traditionally used. Thirty-three patients recovering after arthroscopic knee surgery participated in the study. The whole assessment procedure was repeated. Reproducibility and agreement were quantified by the intra class correlation coefficient. The height of a one-leg vertical jump and the number of side hops showed high agreement between the two modalities and high reproducibility (ICC > 0.85). Due to differences in the set-up of the assessment, agreement could not be achieved for three mobility parameters, but even the correlation was only fair (r < 0.5). Knee stability showed poor agreement. Consequently, the use of the sensor can currently only be recommended for selected parameters. The variation in degree of agreement and reproducibility across different parameters clearly indicate the need for developing corresponding guidance for each new sensor put onto the market.
Subject
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference41 articles.
1. Wearable Inertial Sensors for Human Movement Analysis: A Five-Year Update;Picerno;Expert Rev. Med. Devices,2021
2. Wearable Movement Sensors for Rehabilitation: A Focused Review of Technological and Clinical Advances;Porciuncula;PM&R,2018
3. Wearable Technologies for Active Living and Rehabilitation: Current Research Challenges and Future Opportunities;Rodgers;J. Rehabil. Assist. Technol. Eng.,2019
4. The Emerging Clinical Role of Wearables: Factors for Successful Implementation in Healthcare;Smuck;NPJ Digit. Med.,2021
5. Lang, C.E., Barth, J., Holleran, C.L., Konrad, J.D., and Bland, M.D. (2020). Implementation of Wearable Sensing Technology for Movement: Pushing Forward into the Routine Physical Rehabilitation Care Field. Sensors, 20.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献