Abstract

With the growing number of people seeking medical advice due to low back pain (LBP), individualised physiotherapeutic rehabilitation is becoming increasingly relevant. Thirty volunteers were asked to perform three typical LBP rehabilitation exercises (Prone-Rocking, Bird-Dog and Rowing) in two categories: clinically prescribed exercise (CPE) and typical compensatory movement (TCM). Three inertial sensors were used to detect the movement of the back during exercise performance and thus generate a dataset that is used to develop an algorithm that detects typical compensatory movements in autonomously performed LBP exercises. The best feature combinations out of 50 derived features displaying the highest capacity to differentiate between CPE and TCM in each exercise were determined. For classifying exercise movements as CPE or TCM, a binary decision tree was trained with the best performing features. The results showed that the trained classifier is able to distinguish CPE from TCM in Bird-Dog, Prone-Rocking and Rowing with up to 97.7% (Head Sensor, one feature), 98.9% (Upper back Sensor, one feature) and 80.5% (Upper back Sensor, two features) using only one sensor. Thus, as a proof-of-concept, the introduced classification models can be used to detect typical compensatory movements in autonomously performed LBP exercises.

Highlights

  • Rehabilitation is usually performed in a hospital or outpatient environment

  • Since the ultimate goal of this work is the support of patients in autonomously performing rehabilitation or prevention exercises, it might be useful to reduce the number of necessary sensors and to focus on the simplest way to mount them

  • This study was able to show that the monitoring of rehabilitation and prevention exercises is possible with only one sensor for two of the three test exercises

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Summary

Introduction

Rehabilitation is usually performed in a hospital or outpatient environment. Exercising for preventing physical disorders in contrast is mostly autonomously performed at home or at a gym. Physiotherapy is the main path to follow when focusing on orthopaedic disorders and especially low back pain (LBP). The global Years Lived with Disabilities (YLDs) caused by LBP between 1990 and 2017 increased by 52.7% to 64.9 million. In the case of LBP, Western Europe had the highest number of YLDs and LBP is a common reason for a medical consultation [1–3]. It has been shown that exercise reduces pain and increases function in patients with low back pain [4] and generally increases individuals’

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