Abstract

The fact that almost one third of population >65 years-old has at least one fall per year, makes the risk-of-fall assessment through easy-to-use measurements an important issue in current clinical practice. A common way to evaluate posture is through the recording of the center-of-pressure (CoP) displacement (statokinesigram) with force platforms. Most of the previous studies, assuming homogeneous statokinesigrams in quiet standing, used global parameters in order to characterize the statokinesigrams. However the latter analysis provides little information about local characteristics of statokinesigrams. In this study, we propose a multidimensional scoring approach which locally characterizes statokinesigrams on small time-periods, or blocks, while highlighting those which are more indicative to the general individual’s class (faller/non-faller). Moreover, this information can be used to provide a global score in order to evaluate the postural control and classify fallers/non-fallers. We evaluate our approach using the statokinesigram of 126 community-dwelling elderly (78.5 ± 7.7 years). Participants were recorded with eyes open and eyes closed (25 seconds each acquisition) and information about previous falls was collected. The performance of our findings are assessed using the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis and the area under the curve (AUC). The results show that global scores provided by splitting statokinesigrams in smaller blocks and analyzing them locally, classify fallers/non-fallers more effectively (AUC = 0.77 ± 0.09 instead of AUC = 0.63 ± 0.12 for global analysis when splitting is not used). These promising results indicate that such methodology might provide supplementary information about the risk of fall of an individual and be of major usefulness in assessment of balance-related diseases such as Parkinson’s disease.

Highlights

  • Postural control is defined as the ability of individuals to maintain a controlled upright position

  • This score indicates the probability of each time-block to belong to the unquiet blocks (UB) cluster

  • The objective of this study was to verify the hypothesis that 1) a statokinesigram is not necessarily uniform, in the sense that its dynamics may change throughout its duration, 2) quiet and unquiet blocks are both present in most statokinesigrams, and 3) the presence and profile of UBs can be used to efficiently classify fallers and non fallers

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Summary

Introduction

Postural control is defined as the ability of individuals to maintain a controlled upright position. A tool of choice for clinical researchers to quantify and evaluate postural control are force platforms Such platforms record the displacement of the centre of pressure (CoP) which is applied by the whole body in time [5] while the individual stands quietly upon it and follows the clinician’s instructions/protocol. Many indices derived by the CoP displacement have been proposed previously, showing that CoP displacement characteristics and dynamic structure(ex.regularity) can reflect individuals’ postural impairement [3, 8,9,10,11,12] It has been shown through frequency analysis that energy distribution at specific frequency-bands, can inform about the chosen postural strategy by an individual [13]. Researchers analyzed statokinesigrams using timescale wavelet analysis [14,15,16], in order to evaluate as well as detect the transitions between postural strategies

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