Abstract
The inertial motion unit (IMU) is an effective tool for monitoring and assessing gait impairment in patients with lumbar disc herniation(LDH). However, the current clinical assessment methods for LDH gait focus on patients’ subjective scoring indicators and lack the assessment of kinematic ability; at the same time, individual differences in the motor function degradation of the healthy and affected lower limbs of LDH patients are also ignored. To solve this problem, we propose an LDH gait feature model based on multi-source adaptive Kalman data fusion of acceleration and angular velocity. The gait phase is segmented by using an adaptive Kalman data fusion algorithm to estimate the attitude angle, and obtaining gait events through a zero-velocity update technique and a peak detection algorithm. Two IMUs were used to analyze the gait characteristics of lumbar disc patients and healthy gait people, including 12 gait characteristics such as gait spatiotemporal parameters, kinematic parameters, gait variability and stability. Statistical methods were used to analyze the characteristic model and verify the biological differences between the healthy affected side of LDH and healthy subjects. Finally, feature engineering and machine learning technology were used to identify the gait pattern of inertial movement units in patients with lumbar intervertebral disc disease, and achieved a classification accuracy of 95.50%, providing an effective gait feature set and method for clinical evaluation of LDH.
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More From: Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering
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