Godfrey A, Lara J, Del Din S, Hickey A, Munro C A, Wiuff C, Chowdhury S A, Mathers J C, Rochester L
Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, Campus for Ageing & Vitality, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK; Clinical Ageing Research Unit, Newcastle University, Campus for Ageing & Vitality, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Institute of Cellular Medicine, Newcastle University, Campus for Ageing & Vitality, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK; Human Nutrition Research Centre, Newcastle University, Campus for Ageing & Vitality, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Maturitas. 2015 Sep;82(1):116-22. doi: 10.1016/j.maturitas.2015.04.003. Epub 2015 Apr 14.
The aims of this study were to (i) investigate instrumented physical capability (iCap) as a valid method during a large study and (ii) determine whether iCap can provide important additional features of postural control and gait to categorise cohorts not previously possible with manual recordings.
Cross-sectional analysis involving instrumented testing on 74 adults who were recruited as part of a pilot intervention study; LiveWell. Participants wore a single accelerometer-based monitor (lower back) during standardised physical capability tests so that outcomes could be compared directly with manual recordings (stopwatch and measurement tape) made concurrently.
Time, distance, postural control and gait characteristics.
Agreement between manual and iCap ranged from moderate to excellent (0.649-0.983) with mean differences between methods low and deemed acceptable. Additionally, iCap successfully quantified (i) postural control characteristics which showed sensitivity to distinguish between 5 variations of the standing balance test and (ii) 14 gait characteristics known to be sensitive to age/pathology.
Our findings show that iCap can provide robust quantitative data about physical capability during standardised tests while also providing sensitive (age/pathology) postural control and gait characteristics not previously quantifiable with manual recordings. The methodology which we propose may have practical utility in a wide range of clinical and public health surveys and studies, including intervention studies, where assessment could be undertaken within diverse settings. This will need to be tested in further validation studies in a wider range of settings.
本研究的目的是:(i)在一项大型研究中调查仪器化身体能力(iCap)作为一种有效方法;(ii)确定iCap是否能够提供姿势控制和步态的重要附加特征,以便对以前无法通过手动记录进行分类的队列进行分类。
横断面分析,对74名成年人进行仪器测试,这些成年人是作为一项试点干预研究“健康生活”的一部分招募的。在标准化身体能力测试期间,参与者佩戴一个基于加速度计的监测器(下背部),以便能够将结果与同时进行的手动记录(秒表和卷尺)直接进行比较。
时间、距离、姿势控制和步态特征。
手动记录与iCap之间的一致性从中度到极好(0.649 - 0.983),方法之间的平均差异较小且被认为可以接受。此外,iCap成功地量化了:(i)姿势控制特征,该特征显示出区分站立平衡测试的5种变化的敏感性;(ii)已知对年龄/病理敏感的14种步态特征。
我们的研究结果表明,iCap能够在标准化测试期间提供有关身体能力的可靠定量数据,同时还能提供以前无法通过手动记录量化的敏感(年龄/病理)姿势控制和步态特征。我们提出的方法可能在广泛的临床和公共卫生调查及研究中具有实际应用价值,包括干预研究,在不同环境中都可以进行评估。这需要在更广泛的环境中进行进一步的验证研究来测试。