| Literature DB >> 30038402 |
A Chadwell1, L Kenney2, M H Granat2, S Thies2, J Head2, A Galpin2, R Baker3, J Kulkarni4.
Abstract
Studies of the effectiveness of prosthetic hands involve assessing user performance on functional tasks, typically collected in the lab, sometimes combined with self-report of real-world use. In this paper we compare real-world upper limb activity between a group of 20 myoelectric prosthesis users and 20 anatomically intact adults. Activity was measured from wrist-worn accelerometers over a 7-day period. The temporal patterns in upper limb activity are presented and the balance of activity between the two limbs quantified. We also evaluated the prosthesis users' performance on a goal-directed task, characterised using measures including task success rate, completion time, gaze behaviour patterns, and kinematics (e.g. variability and patterns in hand aperture). Prosthesis users were heavily reliant on their intact limb during everyday life, in contrast to anatomically intact adults who demonstrated similar reliance on both upper limbs. There was no significant correlation between the amount of time a prosthesis was worn and reliance on the intact limb, and there was no significant correlation between either of these measures and any of the assessed kinematic and gaze-related measures of performance. We found participants who had been prescribed a prosthesis for longer to demonstrate more symmetry in their overall upper limb activity, although this was not reflected in the symmetry of unilateral limb use. With the exception of previously published case studies, this is the first report of real world upper limb activity in myoelectric prosthesis users and confirms the widely held belief that users are heavily reliant on their intact limb.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30038402 PMCID: PMC6056489 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-29503-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Allocation of VM data (per epoch) into categories.
Figure 2“” as calculated using the non-wear algorithm for each of the 20 participants. Median = 45.6 hours (IQR = 63.4).
Figure 3Histograms for the participants with (a) the lowest “” value, (b) the “” value closest to the mean and median of all twenty participants, and (c) the highest “Median %Reliance” value (the person most reliant on their anatomical arm). NB. The time (y-axis) is displayed using a log10 scale to mitigate for large amounts of unilateral activity.
Figure 4Spiral plots for all 20 myoelectric prosthesis users. The plots are ordered according the “” values (calculated based on the times the prosthesis was worn) from the person who is the least reliant on the anatomical side to the person who is the most reliant. The “” for each user is shown in blue (rounded to the nearest hour), and the “” is shown in red.
Figure 5Spiral plots for all 20 anatomically intact subjects. The plots are ordered according the “” values from the person who is the least reliant on the dominant side to the person who is the most reliant. The “” is shown in red.
Figure 6Histograms showing the grouped data for (a) all 20 anatomically intact subjects and (b) all 20 prosthesis users. The anatomically intact participants are similarly reliant on both arms (“” =51.5%), whilst the prosthesis users are more reliant on the anatomically intact side (“” =79.1%).
Figure 7(a) The all-day prosthesis wearer with the highest “” value (=87.3%), (b) the all-day wearer with the lowest “” value (=72.1%), and (C) an average anatomically intact participant (“” =51.3%).
Kendall’s Tau-b (2-tailed) correlations between the measures of goal-directed task performance and the measures of everyday activity. NB. The calibration of the eye tracker failed for 1 participant, and the “” for 2 participants was undefined (no unilateral prosthesis activity); these participants were excluded from the relevant correlations (n = number of values included in correlation)
| Success Rate | Task Duration | Delay Plateau Length | Reach Plateau Length | Acceleration Variability | Reach-to-grasp %Hand | Reach-to-grasp %GCA | Reach-to-grasp %LCA/Tube | Transport %Hand/GCA | Transport %LCA/Tube | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median %Reliance Dominant | τ = 0.071 p = 0.681 n = 20 | τ = 0.105 p = 0.516 n = 20 | τ = 0.158 p = 0.330 n = 20 | τ = −0.074 p = 0.650 n = 20 | τ = −0.053 p = 0.746 n = 20 | τ = 0.030 p = 0.860 n = 19 | τ = 0.076 p = 0.649 n = 19 | τ = −0.041 p = 0.807 n = 19 | τ = −0.129 p = 0.441 n = 19 | τ = 0.181 p = 0.278 n = 19 |
| Unilateral Ratio | τ = 0.200 p = 0.272 n = 18 | τ = −0.150 p = 0.384 n = 18 | τ = 0.020 p = 0.910 n = 18 | τ = 0.020 p = 0.910 n = 18 | τ = −0.255 p = 0.140 n = 18 | τ = −0.260 p = 0.155 n = 17 | τ = −0.015 p = 0.934 n = 17 | τ = 0.309 p = 0.084 n = 17 | τ = −0.199 p = 0.266 n = 17 | τ = 0.088 p = 0.621 n = 17 |
| Prosthesis Wear Time | τ = 0.047 p = 0.784 n = 20 | τ = 0.000 p = 1.000 n = 20 | τ = 0.053 p = 0.746 n = 20 | τ = −0.158 p = 0.330 n = 20 | τ = −0.011 p = 0.948 n = 20 | τ = 0.066 p = 0.697 n = 19 | τ = 0.251 p = 0.132 n = 19 | τ = −0.263 p = 0.115 n = 19 | τ = −0.117 p = 0.484 n = 19 | τ = 0.287 p = 0.086 n = 19 |
| Unilateral Dominant | τ = 0.083 p = 0.632 n = 20 | τ = 0.116 p = 0.475 n = 20 | τ = 0.126 p = 0.436 n = 20 | τ = −0.232 p = 0.153 n = 20 | τ = 0.105 p = 0.516 n = 20 | τ = −0.042 p = 0.805 n = 19 | τ = 0.088 p = 0.600 n = 19 | τ = −0.053 p = 0.753 n = 19 | τ = −0.235 p = 0.161 n = 19 | τ = 0.263 p = 0.115 n = 19 |
| Unilateral Non-dominant | τ = −0.191 p = 0.273 n = 20 | τ = 0.281 p = 0.085 n = 20 | τ = 0.143 p = 0.380 n = 20 | τ = −0.207 p = 0.205 n = 20 | τ = 0.218 p = 0.183 n = 20 | τ = 0.128 p = 0.457 n = 19 | τ = 0.130 p = 0.441 n = 19 | τ = −0.201 p = 0.233 n = 19 | τ = −0.065 p = 0.700 n = 19 | τ = 0.118 p = 0.483 n = 19 |
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