| Literature DB >> 31779108 |
Angela Botros1,2, Narayan Schütz1,2, Martin Camenzind3, Prabitha Urwyler1,2,4, Daniel Bolliger3, Tim Vanbellingen1,5, Rolf Kistler3, Stephan Bohlhalter5, Rene M Müri1,4, Urs P Mosimann1, Tobias Nef1,2.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by a highly individual disease-profile as well as fluctuating symptoms. Consequently, 24-h home monitoring in a real-world environment would be an ideal solution for precise symptom diagnostics. In recent years, small lightweight sensors which have assisted in objective, reliable analysis of motor symptoms have attracted a lot of attention. While technical advances are important, patient acceptance of such new systems is just as crucial to increase long-term adherence. So far, there has been a lack of long-term evaluations of PD-patient sensor adherence and acceptance. In a pilot study of PD patients (N = 4), adherence (wearing time) and acceptance (questionnaires) of a multi-part sensor set was evaluated over a 4-week timespan. The evaluated sensor set consisted of 3 body-worn sensors and 7 at-home installed ambient sensors. After one month of continuous monitoring, the overall system usability scale (SUS)-questionnaire score was 71.5%, with an average acceptance score of 87% for the body-worn sensors and 100% for the ambient sensors. On average, sensors were worn 15 h and 4 min per day. All patients reported strong preferences of the sensor set over manual self-reporting methods. Our results coincide with measured high adherence and acceptance rate of similar short-term studies and extend them to long-term monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: Accelerometer; PIR sensor; Parkinson’s disease; acceptance; adherence; ambient sensors; body-worn sensors; motor disorders; patient monitoring; remote sensing technology; symptom assessment; telemetry; wearable electronic devices
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31779108 PMCID: PMC6928790 DOI: 10.3390/s19235169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Results from acceptance and adherence evaluation. (a) Answer scores from the questionnaire. The question item is depicted at the bottom of each bar. Items Q1–Q3 are repeated once for every body-worn sensor. (b) Total wearing time of the three body-worn sensors over 4 weeks. The grey bar outlines 24 h, the yellowish bar outlines the 16 h mark. (c) Example of daily sensor-wearing time over consecutive 12 days. Green is wearing time; red is non-wearing time. For every day, wrist, hip and ankle sensors are listed individually.
Comments to the open-end questions Q4, Q6 and Q11. All answers are translated from German.
| Open-End Questions | |
|---|---|
| Q4 (wrist): | “When changing clothes, like jumpers or jackets, the [wrist] sensor was a bit disturbing”. |
| Q4 (ankle): | “When changing trousers, the [ankle] sensor was a bit disturbing”. |
| Q4 (hip): | “In winter, the sensor is less disturbing as compared to when light clothes are worn. |
| I wore the [hip] sensor at the front. On the back it was more disturbing”. | |
| “When using the toilet, it was bothersome”. | |
| Q6: | “I forgot about the [ambient] sensors”. |
| Q11: | “Not in summer”. |
| “I enjoyed participating in this study”. | |
In this table, the p-values for the paired t-test for every participant and every two sensors are depicted.
| P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| wrist-hip | 0.07 | 0.46 | <0.01 | 0.02 |
| wrist-ankle | 0.30 | 0.14 | 0.01 | 0.04 |
| hip-ankle | 0.82 | 0.55 | <0.01 | 0.13 |
Classification results, based on preliminary usability tests.
| Motor Symptom | Sensitivity | Specificity | Precision |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bradykinesia | 69.8% | 68.3% | 70.1% |
| Dyskinesia | 69.0% | 72.2% | 72.5% |
| Tremor | 74.2% | 69.7% | 70.8% |
Figure 2The complete sensor set with body-worn sensors as well as ambient sensors. (a) acceleration sensor, worn on wrist and ankle with a flexible strap and 3D-printed encasing. (b) The strap is simple to put on and take off, even with reduced finger or hand mobility and dexterity. (c)Fully enclosing sturdy shell for hip sensor. A suspender closure is used for steady fixation on the belt or the trouser seam. (d) The ambient sensor set consists of 5 PIR sensors (left), 2 two-piece magnetic door sensors (right) and the base station. (e) Example of self-reporting PD home diary.
Questionnaire items additional to the SUS. In the evaluation, all questions are rated on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree). The negatively formulated questions Q2, Q5, Q7 and Q8 are reverse coded by subtracting their value from 6 in the evaluation.