2022
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pdig.0000120
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Open-source dataset reveals relationship between walking bout duration and fall risk classification performance in persons with multiple sclerosis

Abstract: Falls are frequent and associated with morbidity in persons with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). Symptoms of MS fluctuate, and standard biannual clinical visits cannot capture these fluctuations. Remote monitoring techniques that leverage wearable sensors have recently emerged as an approach sensitive to disease variability. Previous research has shown that fall risk can be identified from walking data collected by wearable sensors in controlled laboratory conditions however this data may not be generalizable to va… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 65 publications
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“…However, based on our previous findings [38], the strength of these relationships is poor compared to those observed on postural sway data collected during daily life (e.g., Range and ABC had a correlation of 0.71 from free living data compared to the 0.36 observed using the ID method). This difference may be related to the well documented issue that laboratory based tests are not able to adequately capture the variability with which people, and particularly PwMS whose symptoms are known to change dramatically from day to day, move in free living environments [33], [42]. Considering the results presented herein and our previous findings, postural sway features computed from chest accelerometer data are valid, which allows for easy sensor placement if deployed in a remote setting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, based on our previous findings [38], the strength of these relationships is poor compared to those observed on postural sway data collected during daily life (e.g., Range and ABC had a correlation of 0.71 from free living data compared to the 0.36 observed using the ID method). This difference may be related to the well documented issue that laboratory based tests are not able to adequately capture the variability with which people, and particularly PwMS whose symptoms are known to change dramatically from day to day, move in free living environments [33], [42]. Considering the results presented herein and our previous findings, postural sway features computed from chest accelerometer data are valid, which allows for easy sensor placement if deployed in a remote setting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…PwMS who self-reported to have fallen within the previous six-months were characterized as fallers based on the criteria "consider a fall as an event where you unintentionally came to rest on the ground or a lower level." This study has been previously described in detail and the data are publicly available [33]. Participants were asked to complete various activities of daily living, several PRMs, and a neurologist administered Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) [34].…”
Section: Clinical Significance 1) Subjects and Protocolmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, based on our previous findings [38], the strength of these relationships is poor compared to those observed on postural sway data collected during daily life (e.g., Range and ABC had a correlation of 0.71 from free living data compared to the 0.36 observed using the SSD method). This difference may be related to the well documented issue that laboratory based tests are not able to adequately capture the variability with which people, and particularly PwMS whose symptoms are known to change dramatically from day to day, move in free living environments [33], [42]. Considering the results presented herein and our previous findings, postural sway features computed from chest accelerometer data are valid, which allows for easy sensor placement if deployed in a remote setting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…A key challenge of remote monitoring is the need to identify meaningful data to analyze amongst high volume datasets. One common technique is to inspect data from standardized tasks, which are either assigned to the patient (e.g., [19]- [21]) or performed naturally during daily life (e.g., [22]- [25]). An example of the latter are daily transitions from sitting to standing (sist) or standing to sitting (stsi).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%