Battis Aurora, Norrie Jarrett P, McMaster Hannah, Beaudette Shawn M
Department of Kinesiology, Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2024 Oct 1;25(1):770. doi: 10.1186/s12891-024-07867-3.
Lower back pain (LBP) is a disability that affects a large proportion of the population and treatment for this condition has been shifting towards a more individualized, patient-centered approach. There has been a recent uptake in the utilization and implementation of wearable sensors that can administer biofeedback in various industrial, clinical, and performance-based settings. Despite this, there is a strong need to investigate how wearable sensors can be used in a sensorimotor (re)training approach, including how sensory biofeedback from wearable sensors can be used to improve measures of spinal motor control and proprioception.
The purpose of this scoping review was to examine the wide range of wearable sensor-mediated biofeedback frameworks currently being utilized to enhance spine posture and motor function.
A comprehensive scoping review was conducted in adherence with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Guidelines extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) across the following databases: Embase, PubMed, Scopus, Cochrane, and IEEEXplore. Articles related to wearable biofeedback and spine movement were reviewed dated from 1980 - 2020. Extracted data was collected as per a predetermined checklist including the type, timing, trigger, location, and magnitude of sensory feedback being applied to the body.
A total of 23 articles were reviewed and analysed. The most used wearable sensor to inform biofeedback were inertial measurement units (IMUs). Haptic (vibrotactile) feedback was the most common sensory stimulus. Most studies used an instantaneous online trigger to initiate sensory feedback derived from information pertaining to gross lumbar angles or the absolute orientations of the thorax or pelvis.
This is the first study to review wearable sensor-derived sensory biofeedback to modulate spine motor control. Although the type of wearable sensor and feedback were common, this study highlights the lack of consensus regarding the timing and structure of sensory feedback, suggesting the need to optimize any sensory feedback to a specific use case. The findings from this study help to improve the understanding surrounding the ecological utility of wearable sensor-mediated biofeedback in industrial, clinical, and performance settings to enhance the sensorimotor control of the lumbar spine.
下背痛(LBP)是一种影响很大一部分人群的残疾,针对这种疾病的治疗已逐渐转向更个性化、以患者为中心的方法。最近,可穿戴传感器在各种工业、临床和基于性能的环境中用于提供生物反馈的应用和实施有所增加。尽管如此,仍迫切需要研究可穿戴传感器如何用于感觉运动(再)训练方法,包括如何利用可穿戴传感器的感觉生物反馈来改善脊柱运动控制和本体感觉的测量。
本范围综述的目的是研究目前用于改善脊柱姿势和运动功能的各种可穿戴传感器介导的生物反馈框架。
按照系统评价和元分析的首选报告项目扩展指南(PRISMA-ScR),在以下数据库中进行了全面的范围综述:Embase、PubMed、Scopus、Cochrane和IEEEXplore。对1980年至2020年期间与可穿戴生物反馈和脊柱运动相关的文章进行了综述。根据预先确定的清单收集提取的数据,包括应用于身体的感觉反馈的类型、时间、触发因素、位置和强度。
共审查和分析了23篇文章。用于提供生物反馈的最常用可穿戴传感器是惯性测量单元(IMU)。触觉(振动触觉)反馈是最常见的感觉刺激。大多数研究使用即时在线触发来启动基于与腰椎总角度或胸部或骨盆绝对方向相关信息的感觉反馈。
这是第一项综述可穿戴传感器衍生的感觉生物反馈以调节脊柱运动控制的研究。尽管可穿戴传感器的类型和反馈很常见,但本研究强调在感觉反馈的时间和结构方面缺乏共识,这表明需要针对特定用例优化任何感觉反馈。本研究的结果有助于增进对可穿戴传感器介导的生物反馈在工业、临床和性能环境中的生态效用的理解,以增强腰椎的感觉运动控制。