School of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Division of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Phys Ther. 2024 Feb 1;104(2). doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzad172.
The objectives of this study were to establish the short-term feasibility and usability of wrist-worn wearable sensors for capturing the arm and hand activity of people with stroke and to explore the association between factors related to the use of the paretic arm and hand.
Thirty people with chronic stroke were monitored with wrist-worn wearable sensors for 12 hours per day for a 7-day period. Participants also completed standardized assessments to capture stroke severity, arm motor impairments, self-perceived arm use, and self-efficacy. The usability of the wearable sensors was assessed using the adapted System Usability Scale and an exit interview. Associations between motor performance and capacity (arm and hand impairments and activity limitations) were assessed using Spearman correlations.
Minimal technical issues or lack of adherence to the wearing schedule occurred, with 87.6% of days procuring valid data from both sensors. The average sensor wear time was 12.6 (standard deviation [SD] = 0.2) hours per day. Three participants experienced discomfort with 1 of the wristbands, and 3 other participants had unrelated adverse events. There were positive self-reported usability scores (mean = 85.4/100) and high user satisfaction. Significant correlations were observed for measures of motor capacity and self-efficacy with paretic arm use in the home and the community (Spearman correlation coefficients = 0.44-0.71).
This work demonstrates the feasibility and usability of a consumer-grade wearable sensor for capturing paretic arm activity outside the laboratory. It provides early insight into the everyday arm use of people with stroke and related factors, such as motor capacity and self-efficacy.
The integration of wearable technologies into clinical practice offers new possibilities to complement in-person clinical assessments and to better understand how each person is moving outside of therapy and throughout the recovery and reintegration phase. Insight gained from monitoring the arm and hand use of people with stroke in the home and community is the first step toward informing future research with an emphasis on causal mechanisms with clinical relevance.
本研究的目的是确定可穿戴腕部传感器在捕捉脑卒中患者手臂和手部活动方面的短期可行性和实用性,并探讨与瘫痪手臂和手部使用相关的因素之间的关联。
30 名慢性脑卒中患者佩戴腕部可穿戴传感器,每天佩戴 12 小时,为期 7 天。参与者还完成了标准化评估,以捕捉中风严重程度、手臂运动障碍、自我感知手臂使用和自我效能。使用改编后的系统可用性量表和退出访谈评估可穿戴传感器的可用性。使用 Spearman 相关分析评估运动表现和能力(手臂和手部损伤和活动受限)之间的关联。
只有 87.6%的日子能从两个传感器中获得有效数据,出现了一些微小的技术问题或佩戴时间表遵守不严格的情况。传感器的平均佩戴时间为每天 12.6(标准差[SD] = 0.2)小时。有 3 名参与者对 1 个腕带感到不适,还有 3 名参与者出现了无关的不良事件。参与者报告了积极的可用性评分(平均值=85.4/100)和高用户满意度。在家庭和社区中,运动能力和自我效能与瘫痪手臂使用的测量之间观察到显著相关性(Spearman 相关系数=0.44-0.71)。
这项工作证明了可穿戴传感器在实验室外捕捉瘫痪手臂活动的可行性和实用性。它提供了关于中风患者日常手臂使用情况以及相关因素(如运动能力和自我效能)的早期见解。
可穿戴技术融入临床实践提供了新的可能性,可以补充面对面的临床评估,并更好地了解每个人在治疗之外以及在康复和重新融入阶段的运动方式。通过监测中风患者在家中和社区中手臂和手部的使用情况获得的见解是朝着为未来研究提供信息迈出的第一步,重点是具有临床相关性的因果机制。