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Measuring clinically relevant knee motion with a self-calibrated wearable sensor
Institution:1. Department of Physiotherapy, University College of Northern Denmark (UCN), Denmark;2. SMI®, Department of Health Science and Technology, Faculty of Medicine, Aalborg University, Denmark;1. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Western University, London, CA, USA;2. Department of Medical Biophysics, Western University, London, CA, USA;3. Schulich School of Medicine, Western University, London, CA, USA
Abstract:Low-cost sensors provide a unique opportunity to continuously monitor patient progress during rehabilitation; however, these sensors have yet to demonstrate the fidelity and lack the calibration paradigms necessary to be viable tools for clinical research. The purpose of this study was to validate a low-cost wearable sensor that accurately measured peak knee extension during clinical exercises and needed no additional equipment for calibration. Sagittal plane knee motion was quantified using a 9-axis motion sensor and directly compared to motion capture data. The motion sensor measured the field strength of a strong earth magnet secured to the distal femur, which was correlated with knee angle during a simple calibration process. Peak knee motions and kinematic patterns were compared with motion capture data using paired t-tests and cross correlation, respectively. Peak extension values during seated knee extensions were accurate within 5 degrees across all subjects (root mean square error: 2.6 degrees, P = 0.29). Knee flexion during gait strongly correlated (0.84 ≤ rxy ≤ 0.99) with motion capture measurements but demonstrated peak flexion errors of 10 degrees. In this study, we present a low-cost sensor (≈$ 35 US) that accurately determines knee extension angle following a calibration procedure that did not require any other equipment. Our findings demonstrate that this sensor paradigm is a feasible tool to monitor patient progress throughout physical therapy. However, dynamic motions that are associated with soft-tissue artifact may limit the accuracy of this type of wearable sensor.
Keywords:Wearable sensors  Motion capture  Inertial measurement unit  Low-cost sensor
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