University of Salford, Salford, UK.
People Powered Prosthetics Group, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
J Neuroeng Rehabil. 2020 Jul 14;17(1):93. doi: 10.1186/s12984-020-00711-4.
Understanding how prostheses are used in everyday life is central to the design, provision and evaluation of prosthetic devices and associated services. This paper reviews the scientific literature on methodologies and technologies that have been used to assess the daily use of both upper- and lower-limb prostheses. It discusses the types of studies that have been undertaken, the technologies used to monitor physical activity, the benefits of monitoring daily living and the barriers to long-term monitoring, with particular focus on low-resource settings.
A systematic literature search was conducted in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, CINAHL and EMBASE of studies that monitored the activity of prosthesis users during daily-living.
Sixty lower-limb studies and 9 upper-limb studies were identified for inclusion in the review. The first studies in the lower-limb field date from the 1990s and the number has increased steadily since the early 2000s. In contrast, the studies in the upper-limb field have only begun to emerge over the past few years. The early lower-limb studies focused on the development or validation of actimeters, algorithms and/or scores for activity classification. However, most of the recent lower-limb studies used activity monitoring to compare prosthetic components. The lower-limb studies mainly used step-counts as their only measure of activity, focusing on the amount of activity, not the type and quality of movements. In comparison, the small number of upper-limb studies were fairly evenly spread between development of algorithms, comparison of everyday activity to clinical scores, and comparison of different prosthesis user populations. Most upper-limb papers reported the degree of symmetry in activity levels between the arm with the prosthesis and the intact arm.
Activity monitoring technology used in conjunction with clinical scores and user feedback, offers significant insights into how prostheses are used and whether they meet the user's requirements. However, the cost, limited battery-life and lack of availability in many countries mean that using sensors to understand the daily use of prostheses and the types of activity being performed has not yet become a feasible standard clinical practice. This review provides recommendations for the research and clinical communities to advance this area for the benefit of prosthesis users.
了解假体在日常生活中的使用方式对于假体设计、提供和评估以及相关服务至关重要。本文综述了评估上下肢假体日常使用的方法和技术的科学文献。本文讨论了已进行的研究类型、用于监测身体活动的技术、监测日常生活的益处以及长期监测的障碍,尤其侧重于资源匮乏的环境。
在 PubMed、Web of Science、Scopus、CINAHL 和 EMBASE 中进行了系统的文献检索,以监测假体使用者日常生活中的活动。
共纳入 60 项下肢研究和 9 项上肢研究。下肢领域的早期研究可追溯到 20 世纪 90 年代,自 21 世纪初以来,研究数量稳步增加。相比之下,上肢领域的研究仅在过去几年才开始出现。早期的下肢研究侧重于计步器、算法和/或活动分类评分的开发或验证。然而,最近的大多数下肢研究都使用活动监测来比较假肢组件。下肢研究主要使用步数作为唯一的活动测量指标,侧重于活动量,而不是运动的类型和质量。相比之下,少数上肢研究在算法的开发、日常活动与临床评分的比较以及不同假体使用者群体的比较之间分布较为均匀。大多数上肢论文报告了假体侧和未损伤侧手臂之间活动水平的对称性程度。
与临床评分和用户反馈相结合使用的活动监测技术,可以深入了解假体的使用情况以及是否满足用户的需求。然而,成本高、电池寿命有限以及在许多国家缺乏可用性意味着,使用传感器来了解假体的日常使用情况以及正在进行的活动类型尚未成为可行的标准临床实践。本综述为研究和临床界提供了建议,以推进这一领域的发展,造福假体使用者。