Abstract

(1) Background: Measuring joint range of motion has traditionally occurred with a universal goniometer or expensive laboratory based kinematic analysis systems. Technological advances in wearable inertial measurement units (IMU) enables limb motion to be measured with a small portable electronic device. This paper aims to validate an IMU, the ‘Biokin’, for measuring shoulder range of motion in healthy adults; (2) Methods: Thirty participants completed four shoulder movements (forward flexion, abduction, and internal and external rotation) on each shoulder. Each movement was assessed with a goniometer and the IMU by two testers independently. The extent of agreement between each tester’s goniometer and IMU measurements was assessed with intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) and Bland-Altman 95% limits of agreement (LOA). Secondary analysis compared agreement between tester’s goniometer or IMU measurements (inter-rater reliability) using ICC’s and LOA; (3) Results: Goniometer and IMU measurements for all movements showed high levels of agreement when taken by the same tester; ICCs > 0.90 and LOAs < ±5 degrees. Inter-rater reliability was lower; ICCs ranged between 0.71 to 0.89 and LOAs were outside a prior defined acceptable LOAs (i.e., > ±5 degrees); (4) Conclusions: The current study provides preliminary evidence of the concurrent validity of the Biokin IMU for assessing shoulder movements, but only when a single tester took measurements. Further testing of the Biokin’s psychometric properties is required before it can be confidently used in routine clinical practice and research settings.

Highlights

  • Assessing joint range of motion (ROM) is integral in clinical orthopaedics and research settings

  • We have previously demonstrated that the inertial measurement units (IMU) can accurately measure wrist movements [18], but its ability to accurately measure ROM

  • The difference in IMU and goniometer measurements was within five degrees of the mean difference for approximately 95% of participants

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Summary

Introduction

Assessing joint range of motion (ROM) is integral in clinical orthopaedics and research settings. Each method has benefits and limitations, with the universal goniometer being the most commonly adopted technique due to portability and ease of use [1]. Inertial measurement units (IMUs) are one type of motion tracking device that have been widely adopted due to their ease of use, relative low cost, and portability [3,4,5]. These devices utilise recent advancements in the miniaturisation of motion capturing sensors to produce a light, non-invasive and wireless instrument that has the potential to assess human movement in a variety of environments [6,7]

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