| Literature DB >> 33081783 |
Jessica Barth1, Joeseph W Klaesner1,2, Catherine E Lang3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Standardized assessments are used in rehabilitation clinics after stroke to measure restoration versus compensatory movements of the upper limb. Accelerometry is an emerging tool that can bridge the gap between in- and out-of-clinic assessments of the upper limb, but is limited in that it currently does not capture the quality of a person's movement, an important concept to assess compensation versus restoration. The purpose of this analysis was to characterize how accelerometer variables may reflect upper limb compensatory movement patterns after stroke.Entities:
Keywords: Accelerometry; Cerebrovascular disease; Stroke rehabilitation; Upper extremity
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33081783 PMCID: PMC7576735 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-020-00773-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 4.262
Accelerometer variables
| Variable name | Description |
|---|---|
| Isolated non-paretic limb activity [ | Time, in hours, that the non-paretic limb is moving, while the paretic limb is still |
| Isolated paretic limb activity [ | Time, in hours, that the paretic limb is moving, while the non-paretic limb is still |
| Bilateral activity [ | Time, in hours, that both upper limbs are moving together |
| Use ratio [ | Ratio of hours of paretic limb movement, relative to hours of non-paretic limb movement |
| Paretic limb magnitude [ | Magnitude of accelerations of the paretic limb, in activity counts* |
| Bilateral magnitude [ | Intensity, or magnitude of accelerations, of movement across both arms, in activity counts* |
| Magnitude ratio [ | Ratio of the magnitude of paretic UL accelerations relative to the magnitude of the non-paretic UL accelerations. This ratio reflects the contribution of each limb to activity, expressed as a natural log |
| Variability of paretic movement [ | Standard deviation of the magnitude of accelerations across the paretic limb, reflecting the variability of paretic limb movement, in activity counts* |
| Variability of bilateral movement [ | Standard deviation of the magnitude of accelerations across both limbs, reflecting the variability of bilateral upper limb movement, in activity counts* |
| Variation ratio [ | Ratio of the variability of paretic limb accelerations relative to the variability of the non-paretic limb accelerations, reflecting the relative variability in the paretic limb |
| Unimanual Jerk Asymmetry Index [ | Ratio of the average jerk magnitude between the paretic upper limb and the nonparetic upper limb. Higher jerk represents less smooth movement, and an index value of 0 represents similar smoothness of movement in the paretic and non-paretic limbs. Values are bounded between − 1 to + 1 |
| Spectral arc length [ | A measure of movement smoothness that quantifies movement intermittencies independent of the movement’s amplitude and duration. Longer spectral arc lengths are reflective of less smooth or less coordinated movement |
*Activity counts are computed by the Actilife proprietary software such that 1 activity count = 0.001664 g
Characteristics of sample, values are means ± SD (range) or % of total sample unless otherwise specified
| Descriptors (n = 78) | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 61.9 ± 10.5 (32, 85) |
| Gender | 35% Female 65% Male |
| Type of stroke | 72% Ischemic 13% Hemorrhagic 15% Unknown |
| Ethnicity | 99% Non-Hispanic/Latino 1% Hispanic/Latino |
| Months post stroke (median, min/max) | 12, 5/221 |
| Affected limb | 46% Left 54% Right |
| % Concordance* | 51% |
| % Independent with ADL | 79% |
| Baseline ARAT Score | 32.4 ± 11.2 (10–48) |
| Compensatory Movement Score | 73.7 ± 33.6 (11.5–188) |
| Baseline use ratio | 0.66 ± 0.23 (0.22–1.32) |
*Concordance is the percent of individuals whose paretic UL was their dominant UL
Fig. 1Relationships (x-axis) of compensatory movement scores to accelerometer variables (y-axis). Open symbols are in-clinic calculations, and closed symbols are out-of-clinic calculations. Error bars are 95% confidence intervals for each correlation coefficient. Lack of statistical significance occurs when error bars cross the vertical dashed line at 0
Fig. 2Relationship of variability of bilateral movement during in-clinic time (a, rho = − 0.32, p < 0.001) and out-of-clinic (b, rho = − 0.35, p < 0.01). This accelerometer variable had a similar moderate relationship both in and out-of-clinic
Fig. 3Relationship of isolated use of the nonpartetic limb to compensatory movement score, both in-clinic (a, rho = 0.14, p = 0.23) and out-of-clinic (b, rho = 0.61, p < 0.0001). Relationship of the use ratio to the compensatory movement score in-clinic (c, rho = − 0.15, p = 0.18) and out-of-clinic (d, rho = − 0.57, p = 0.18) These variables both had a little to no relationships in-clinic, yet good relationships out-of-clinic
Fig. 4Relationship of two newly proposed metrics that quantify quality of upper limb movement. a Relationship of the Jerk Asymmetry Index to compensatory movement scores (rho = − 0.19, p = 0.09). b Relationship of the spectral arc length of the paretic limb to compensatory movement scores (rho = 0.29, p < 0.01). In b, one outlier with a spectral arc length of > − 6 has been omitted from the plot. Both variables are from out-of-clinic time and had a low relationship with the compensatory movement score