| Literature DB >> 28726022 |
Josien C van den Noort1,2,3, Rens Verhagen4, Kees J van Dijk5, Peter H Veltink5, Michelle C P M Vos5, Rob M A de Bie4, Lo J Bour4, Ciska T Heida5.
Abstract
This proof-of-principle study describes the methodology and explores and demonstrates the applicability of a system, existing of miniature inertial sensors on the hand and a separate force sensor, to objectively quantify hand motor symptoms in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) in a clinical setting (off- and on-medication condition). Four PD patients were measured in off- and on- dopaminergic medication condition. Finger tapping, rapid hand opening/closing, hand pro/supination, tremor during rest, mental task and kinetic task, and wrist rigidity movements were measured with the system (called the PowerGlove). To demonstrate applicability, various outcome parameters of measured hand motor symptoms of the patients in off- vs. on-medication condition are presented. The methodology described and results presented show applicability of the PowerGlove in a clinical research setting, to objectively quantify hand bradykinesia, tremor and rigidity in PD patients, using a single system. The PowerGlove measured a difference in off- vs. on-medication condition in all tasks in the presented patients with most of its outcome parameters. Further study into the validity and reliability of the outcome parameters is required in a larger cohort of patients, to arrive at an optimal set of parameters that can assist in clinical evaluation and decision-making.Entities:
Keywords: Bradykinesia; Fingers; Hand; Inertial sensors; Movement analysis; Parkinson’s disease; Rigidity; Tremor
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28726022 PMCID: PMC5622175 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-017-1881-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Biomed Eng ISSN: 0090-6964 Impact factor: 3.934
Examples of studies using objective quantification of PD motor symptoms.
| Study | Measurement system | Placement on body | Parameters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bradykinesia | |||
| Dunnewold | Accelerometer | Wrist | Mean acceleration |
| Tavares | Quantitative digitography using a computerized-interfaced keyboard | Not applicable | Time of movement interval |
| Koop | Gyroscope | Hand | Root mean square angular velocity |
| Keijsers | Accelerometer | Several body parts | Mean velocity |
| Salarian | Gyroscope | Forearm | Root mean square angular velocity |
| Tabbal | Gyroscope | Forearm | Root mean square angular velocity |
| Jun | Gyroscope | Hand | Root mean square angle and angular velocity |
| Endo | Magnetic sensor consisting of two coils | Thumb and tip of index finger | Maximum velocity |
| Pulliam | Accelerometer and gyroscope | Index finger | Amplitude |
| Mentzel | Accelerometer and gyroscope | Forearm | Time of movement interval |
| Djuric-Jovicic | Gyroscopes | Thumb and tip of index finger | Time of movement interval |
| Tremor | |||
| Keijsers | Accelerometer | Several body parts | Percentage peak frequencies above 4 Hz |
| Salarian | Gyroscope | Forearm | Root mean square angular velocity |
| Giuffrida | Accelerometer and gyroscope | Middle finger | Peak power acceleration and angular velocity |
| Gallego | Gyroscope | Forearm | Amplitude angular velocity |
| Mostile | Accelerometer and gyroscope | Middle finger | Root mean square amplitude |
| Heldman | Accelerometer and gyroscope | Index finger | Peak power of angular velocity |
| Scanlon | Accelerometer | Upper and lower limbs | Root mean square of acceleration |
| Daneault | Accelerometer (in smart phone) | Unknown | Maximum amplitude acceleration |
| Pulliam | Accelerometer and gyroscope | Index finger | Amplitude |
| Rigidity | |||
| Prochazka | Hand-held force sensing device (air-filled pads) combined with a compliant displacement gauge | Wrist | Impedance |
| Fung | Torque motor | Forearm | Impulse |
| Patrick | Pads connected to a force transducer | Elbow | Elastic stiffness |
| Sepheri | Test rig with strain gage force transducer and potentiometer | Elbow | Range of motion |
| Tabbal | Pads connected to a force transducer | Elbow | Impedance |
| Park | Torque motor | Wrist | Torque |
| Endo | Force sensor | Wrist | Torque |
| Powell | Torque motor | Wrist | Work |
| Kwon | Load cell | Wrist | Viscous damping constant |
Figure 1Assessment of hand motor symptoms in a patient with Parkinson’s disease, using the PowerGlove (miniature inertial sensors on the hand and fingers and, for rigidity assessment, an additional force sensor on the palmar side of the hand). From left to right and top to bottom: (1) rapid finger tapping (thumb/index), (2) rapid hand opening/closing movements and (3a, b) pro/supination of the hand for assessment of bradykinesia; tremor was assessed (4) during rest with and without a mental task, (5) during a posturing task (holding hands outstretched below chin) and (6a, b) during an active kinetic task (moving index finger between patient’s nose and the finger of the examiner); (7a, b) the wrist rigidity test consisted of passive wrist flexion/extension (performed by the examiner) with and without contralateral activation by making a fist.
Figure 2Sensors and signals used to determine hand motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease with the PowerGlove system.
Investigated parameters for quantification of bradykinesia, rigidity and tremor obtained by signals measured with the PowerGlove system.
| Task | Parameters |
|---|---|
| Bradykinesia | |
| Finger tapping index on thumb | RMS of the acceleration of the index fingertip, over all cycles (norm of 3D) |
| Pro/supination hand | RMS of acceleration of the hand, over all cycles (norm of 3D) |
| Tremor | |
| During rest | RMS of acceleration of the hand (around axis with highest acceleration) |
| Rigidity | |
| Wrist flexion/extension (passive) | Maximal ROM of wrist angle |
RMS root means square, ROM range of motion, MCP metacarphophalangeal joint
Figure 3Bradykinesia of the hand in Parkinson’s disease patients. Outcome parameters measured with the PowerGlove in off- and on-medication condition: (a) finger tapping (patient 1); (b) opening/closing hand movements (patient 2); (c) pro/supination of the hand (patient 2). For all parameters, the average per cycle (barplot) and the standard deviations over cycles are shown. For RMS, the value of the whole time window is shown. MDS-UPDRS-ME scores are shown in the legends.
Figure 4Tremor of the hand in Parkinson’s disease patients. Outcome parameters measured with the PowerGlove in off- and on-medication condition: (a) tremor at rest (patient 3); (b) tremor during mental task (patient 1); (c) Tremor during kinetic task (patient 2). The frequency band (4–10 Hz) is indicated with the black dotted lines. MDS-UPDRS-ME scores are shown in the legends.
Figure 5Rigidity of the wrist in a Parkinson’s disease patient. Outcome parameters measured with the PowerGlove in off- and on-medication condition (patient 4). The 10–90% range of motion windows are indicated with the black dotted lines. MDS-UPDRS-ME scores are shown in the legends.