Abstract

BackgroundAccelerometers have become common for evaluating the efficacy of rehabilitation for patients with neurologic disorders. For example, metrics like use ratio (UR) and magnitude ratio (MR) have been shown to differentiate movement patterns of children with cerebral palsy (CP) compared to typically-developing (TD) peers. However, these metrics are calculated from “activity counts” – a measure based on proprietary algorithms that approximate movement duration and intensity from raw accelerometer data. Algorithms used to calculate activity counts vary between devices, limiting comparisons of clinical and research results. The goal of this research was to develop complementary metrics based on raw accelerometer data to analyze arm movement after neurologic injury.MethodWe calculated jerk, the derivative of acceleration, to evaluate arm movement from accelerometer data. To complement current measures, we calculated jerk ratio (JR) as the relative jerk magnitude of the dominant (non-paretic) and non-dominant (paretic) arms. We evaluated the JR distribution between arms and calculated the 50th percentile of the JR distribution (JR50). To evaluate these metrics, we analyzed bimanual accelerometry data for five children with hemiplegic CP who underwent Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy (CIMT) and five typically developing (TD) children. We compared JR between the CP and TD cohorts, and to activity count metrics.ResultsThe JR50 differentiated between the CP and TD cohorts (CP = 0.578 ± 0.041 before CIMT, TD = 0.506 ± 0.026), demonstrating increased reliance on the dominant arm for the CP cohort. Jerk metrics also quantified changes in arm use during and after therapy (e.g., JR50 = 0.378 ± 0.125 during CIMT, 0.591 ± 0.057 after CIMT). The JR was strongly correlated with UR and MR (r = − 0.92, 0.89) for the CP cohort. For the TD cohort, JR50 was repeatable across three data collection periods with an average similarity of 0.945 ± 0.015.ConclusionsAcceleration-derived jerk captured differences in motion between TD and CP cohorts and correlated with activity count metrics. The code for calculating and plotting JR is open-source and available for others to use and build upon. By identifying device-independent metrics that can quantify arm movement in daily life, we hope to facilitate collaboration for rehabilitation research using wearable technologies.

Highlights

  • Accelerometers have become common for evaluating the efficacy of rehabilitation for patients with neurologic disorders

  • Some of the most common outcomes based on activity counts include the magnitude ratio (MR), which compares the relative intensity of movement between arms, and the use ratio (UR) which compares duration of arm use [6, 12]

  • We propose that jerk ratio (JR), a measure of the relative jerk between arms from wrist-worn accelerometers, is comparable to activity count measures in its ability to differentiate between children with unilateral cerebral palsy (CP) and typically-developing (TD) peers

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Accelerometers have become common for evaluating the efficacy of rehabilitation for patients with neurologic disorders. Metrics like use ratio (UR) and magnitude ratio (MR) have been shown to differentiate movement patterns of children with cerebral palsy (CP) compared to typically-developing (TD) peers These metrics are calculated from “activity counts” – a measure based on proprietary algorithms that approximate movement duration and intensity from raw accelerometer data. Some of the most common outcomes based on activity counts include the magnitude ratio (MR), which compares the relative intensity of movement between arms, and the use ratio (UR) which compares duration of arm use [6, 12] These metrics have been used to evaluate function before and after interventions and can detect clinically meaningful changes in function. MR and UR have been used to evaluate movement at home and in the clinic for adult stroke [15, 16] and inform the efficacy of rehabilitation [17]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call