Shoe-Integrated Sensor System for Diagnosis of the Concomitant Syndesmotic Injury in Chronic Lateral Ankle Instability: A Prospective Double-Blind Diagnostic Test

Author:

Li Yanzhang123,Guo Rui45ORCID,Wang Yuchen4ORCID,Ma Jingzhong4,Miao Xin123,Yang Jie123,Zhang Zhu123,Wu Xiaoming4,Ren Tianling4,Jiang Dong123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sports Medicine, Peking University Third Hospital, Institute of Sports Medicine of Peking University, Beijing 100191, China

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Sports Injuries, Beijing 100191, China

3. Engineering Research Center of Sports Trauma Treatment Technology and Devices, Ministry of Education, Beijing 100191, China

4. Beijing National Research Center for Information Science and Technology (BNRist), School of Integrated Circuits, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China

5. Tsingyan Micro Technology Co., Ltd., Shaoxing 312099, China

Abstract

Chronic lateral ankle instability (CLAI) is commonly secondary to prior lateral ankle ligament injury, and the concomitant latent syndesmosis injury would prolong recovery time and increase the risk of substantial traumatic arthritis. However, differentiating syndesmotic injury from isolated lateral ankle ligament injury in CLAI cases is difficult by conventional physical and radiological examinations. To improve the accuracy of syndesmotic injury diagnosis, a shoe-integrated sensor system (SISS) is proposed. This system measures plantar pressure during walking to detect the presence of syndesmotic injury. The study included 27 participants who had ankle sprains and underwent an examination. Plantar pressure in eight regions of interest was measured for both limbs, and syndesmotic injuries were examined using arthroscopy. The width of the syndesmosis was measured to evaluate its severity. The characteristics of plantar pressure were compared between patients with normal and injured syndesmosis. The results indicated that peak plantar pressure ratios with logistic regression predicted value > 0.51 accurately distinguished concomitant syndesmotic injury during walking, with high sensitivity (80%) and specificity (75%). The post-test probability of having a syndesmotic injury was positively 80% and negatively 25%. These findings demonstrate the effectiveness of cost-effective wearable sensors in objectively diagnosing concomitant syndesmotic injuries in cases of CLAI.

Funder

Beijing Natural Science Foundation

Guoqiang Institute, Tsinghua University

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering

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