Published 2022
| Version v1
Publication
Events Detection of Anticipatory Postural Adjustments through a Wearable Accelerometer Sensor Is Comparable to That Measured by the Force Platform in Subjects with Parkinson's Disease
Description
Out-of-the-lab instrumented gait testing focuses on steady-state gait and usually does
not include gait initiation (GI) measures. GI involves Anticipatory Postural Adjustments (APAs),
which propel the center of mass (COM) forward and laterally before the first step. These movements
are impaired in persons with Parkinson's disease (PD), contributing to their pathological gait. The
use of a simple GI testing system, outside the lab, would allow improving gait rehabilitation of PD
patients. Here, we evaluated the metrological quality of using a single inertial measurement unit
for APA detection as compared with the use of a gold-standard system, i.e., the force platforms.
Twenty-five PD and eight elderly subjects (ELD) were asked to initiate gait in response to auditory
stimuli while wearing an IMU on the trunk. Temporal parameters (APA-Onset, Time-to-Toe-Off,
Time-to-Heel-Strike, APA-Duration, Swing-Duration) extracted from the accelerometric data and
force platforms were significantly correlated (mean(SD), r: 0.99(0.01), slope: 0.97(0.02)) showing a
good level of agreement (LOA [s]: 0.04(0.01), CV [%]: 2.9(1.7)). PD showed longer APA-Duration
compared to ELD ([s] 0.81(0.17) vs. 0.59(0.09) p < 0.01). APA parameters showed moderate correlation
with the MDS-UPDRS Rigidity, Characterizing-FOG questionnaire and FAB-2 planning. The single
IMU-based reconstruction algorithm was effective in measuring APAs timings in PD. The current
work sets the stage for future developments of tele-rehabilitation and home-based exercises.
Abstract
Out-of-the-lab instrumented gait testing focuses on steady-state gait and usually does not include gait initiation (GI) measures. GI involves Anticipatory Postural Adjustments (APAs), which propel the center of mass (COM) forward and laterally before the first step. These movements are impaired in persons with Parkinson's disease (PD), contributing to their pathological gait. The use of a simple GI testing system, outside the lab, would allow improving gait rehabilitation of PD patients. Here, we evaluated the metrological quality of using a single inertial measurement unit for APA detection as compared with the use of a gold-standard system, i.e., the force platforms. Twenty-five PD and eight elderly subjects (ELD) were asked to initiate gait in response to auditory stimuli while wearing an IMU on the trunk. Temporal parameters (APA-Onset, Time-to-Toe-Off, Time-to-Heel-Strike, APA-Duration, Swing-Duration) extracted from the accelerometric data and force platforms were significantly correlated (mean(SD), r: 0.99(0.01), slope: 0.97(0.02)) showing a good level of agreement (LOA [s]: 0.04(0.01), CV [%]: 2.9(1.7)). PD showed longer APA-Duration compared to ELD ([s] 0.81(0.17) vs. 0.59(0.09) p < 0.01). APA parameters showed moderate correlation with the MDS-UPDRS Rigidity, Characterizing-FOG questionnaire and FAB-2 planning. The single IMU-based reconstruction algorithm was effective in measuring APAs timings in PD. The current work sets the stage for future developments of tele-rehabilitation and home-based exercises.Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1106015
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1106015
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE