| Literature DB >> 28360883 |
Xiaochen Zheng1, Alba Vieira Campos2, Joaquín Ordieres-Meré1, Jose Balseiro2, Sergio Labrador Marcos2, Yolanda Aladro2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Essential tremor (ET) shows amplitude fluctuations throughout the day, presenting challenges in both clinical and treatment monitoring. Tremor severity is currently evaluated by validated rating scales, which only provide a timely and subjective assessment during a clinical visit. Motor sensors have shown favorable performances in quantifying tremor objectively.Entities:
Keywords: accelerometer; continuous monitoring; essential tremor; remote diagnosis; smartwatch
Year: 2017 PMID: 28360883 PMCID: PMC5350115 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1(A) Tremor energy between frequency range 4 and 8 Hz of each minute for four patients. (B) K-mean clustering result: the data were separated into four classes corresponding to the four tremor grades of FTMS.
K-mean clustering result of the tremor energy based on the data collected from four patients.
| Cluster 1 | Cluster 2 | Cluster 3 | Cluster 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster size | 77 | 84 | 57 | 22 |
| Cluster means | 229.30 | 620.36 | 1,036.89 | 1,722.60 |
| Max value | 421.03 | 816.34 | 1,004.71 | 2,243.06 |
| Min value | 124.05 | 429.54 | 993.42 | 1,398.99 |
Summary of the data collected from the eight patients.
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Total number of patients | 8 |
| Total number of hours (days) | 208 (16 days) |
| Hours per patient (minimum) | 17 |
| Hours per patient (maximum) | 34 |
| Hours per patient (mean) | 26 |
| Hours per patient (SD) | 6.05 |
Figure 2(A) Day-to-day correlation between patients’ auto-assessment scores during 2-day standardized tasks and, (B) Correlation of standardized tasks between auto-assessment and neurologist scores, of the all eight patients.
Rating scores of the patient’s self-assessment and neurologists’ assessment.
| Patient no. | Mean Fahn–Tolosa–Marin Tremor Rating Scale scoreAll test, all days; patient’s auto-assessment | Neurologist score |
|---|---|---|
| A | 23.63 (±0.92) | 17 |
| B | 35.33 (±5.61) | 35 |
| C | 20.50 (±6.32) | 13 |
| D | 9.83 (±2.64) | 14 |
| E | 13.83 (±4.45) | 13 |
| F | 26.28 (±5.11) | 20 |
| G | 11.75 (±5.05) | 12 |
| H | 30.81 (±1.36) | 20 |
Basic information of the patients and healthy subject involved in the experiment.
| Subject | Sex | Age | Tremor grade | Arm with higher tremor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy subject | Male | 54 | 0 | None |
| Patient A | Male | 68 | 1 | Right |
| Patient B | Male | 72 | 2 | Right |
| Patient C | Male | 75 | 3 | Left |
| Patient D | Male | 60 | 4 | Equal |
Figure 3Correlation between results based on collected data and the auto-assessment scores reported by four patients with different tremor degrees.
Figure 4(A) Tremor severities of every minute in an hour (19:00–19:59). (B) Percent of each level of tremor during this hour: high- and very high-level tremor appears in more than 65% of the overall time. (C,D) illustrate the collected data in a longer range, which better reflects the overall situation of the patient during 8 h (50% of the day awake). The “Unknown” part means the data during this period are failed to be recorded.
Figure 5Daily analysis of tremor rating of patients A and D, who have the lowest and the highest tremor severity, respectively.