Accelerometric Classification of Resting and Postural Tremor Amplitude

Author:

van der Linden Christina1ORCID,Berger Thea1,Brandt Gregor A.1,Strelow Joshua N.12ORCID,Jergas Hannah1,Baldermann Juan Carlos13,Visser-Vandewalle Veerle2,Fink Gereon R.14ORCID,Barbe Michael T.1,Petry-Schmelzer Jan Niklas1,Dembek Till A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, University Hospital Cologne and Faculty of Medicine, University of Cologne, 50937 Cologne, Germany

2. Department of Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, University Hospital Cologne and Faculty of Medicine, University of Cologne, 50937 Cologne, Germany

3. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital Cologne and Faculty of Medicine, University of Cologne, 50937 Cologne, Germany

4. Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich, 52428 Jülich, Germany

Abstract

Clinical rating scales for tremors have significant limitations due to low resolution, high rater dependency, and lack of applicability in outpatient settings. Reliable, quantitative approaches for assessing tremor severity are warranted, especially evaluating treatment effects, e.g., of deep brain stimulation (DBS). We aimed to investigate how different accelerometry metrics can objectively classify tremor amplitude of Essential Tremor (ET) and tremor in Parkinson’s Disease (PD). We assessed 860 resting and postural tremor trials in 16 patients with ET and 25 patients with PD under different DBS settings. Clinical ratings were compared to different metrics, based on either spectral components in the tremorband or pure acceleration, derived from simultaneous triaxial accelerometry captured at the index finger and wrist. Nonlinear regression was applied to a training dataset to determine the relationship between accelerometry and clinical ratings, which was then evaluated in a holdout dataset. All of the investigated accelerometry metrics could predict clinical tremor ratings with a high concordance (>70%) and substantial interrater reliability (Cohen’s weighted Kappa > 0.7) in out-of-sample data. Finger-worn accelerometry performed slightly better than wrist-worn accelerometry. We conclude that triaxial accelerometry reliably quantifies resting and postural tremor amplitude in ET and PD patients. A full release of our dataset and software allows for implementation, development, training, and validation of novel methods.

Funder

German Research Foundation

Koeln Fortune Program/Faculty of Medicine, University of Cologne

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Biochemistry,Instrumentation,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Analytical Chemistry

Reference35 articles.

1. Fahn, S., Tolosa, E., and Marin, C. (1993). Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders, Williams and Wilkins.

2. The Essential Tremor Rating Assessment Scale;Elble;J. Neurol.,2016

3. Movement Disorder Society-Sponsored Revision of the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS): Scale Presentation and Clinimetric Testing Results;Goetz;Mov. Disord.,2008

4. Tremor Rating Scales and Laboratory Tools for Assessing Tremor;Elble;J. Neurol. Sci.,2022

5. Tremor Amplitude Is Logarithmically Related to 4- and 5-Point Tremor Rating Scales;Elble;Brain,2006

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