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Assessing Site Specificity of Osteoarthritic Gait Kinematics with Wearable Sensors and Their Association with Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs): Knee versus Hip Osteoarthritis
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4623990
Author(s) Nüesch, Corina; Ismailidis, Petros; Koch, David; Pagenstert, Geert; Ilchmann, Thomas; Eckardt, Anke; Stoffel, Karl; Egloff, Christian; Mündermann, Annegret
Author(s) at UniBasel Nüesch, Corina
Ismailidis, Petros
Koch, David
Pagenstert, Geert
Ilchmann, Thomas
Stoffel, Karl
Egloff, Christian
Mündermann, Annegret
Year 2021
Title Assessing Site Specificity of Osteoarthritic Gait Kinematics with Wearable Sensors and Their Association with Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs): Knee versus Hip Osteoarthritis
Journal Sensors
Volume 21
Number 16
Pages / Article-Number 5363
Keywords inertial measurement unit, walking, joint motion, gait pattern, function, pain, SPM, HOOS, KOOS
Abstract There is a great need for quantitative outcomes reflecting the functional status in patients with knee or hip osteoarthritis (OA) to advance the development and investigation of interventions for OA. The purpose of this study was to determine if gait kinematics specific to the disease-i.e., knee versus hip OA-can be identified using wearable sensors and statistical parametric mapping (SPM) and whether disease-related gait deviations are associated with patient reported outcome measures. 113 participants (N = 29 unilateral knee OA; N = 30 unilateral hip OA; N = 54 age-matched asymptomatic persons) completed gait analysis with wearable sensors and the Knee/Hip Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS/HOOS). Data were analyzed using SPM. Knee and hip kinematics differed between patients with knee OA and patients with hip OA (up to 14°, p < 0.001 for knee and 8°, p = 0.003 for hip kinematics), and differences from controls were more pronounced in the affected than unaffected leg of patients. The observed deviations in ankle, knee and hip kinematic trajectories from controls were associated with KOOS/HOOS in both groups. Capturing gait kinematics using wearables has a large potential for application as outcome in clinical trials and for monitoring treatment success in patients with knee or hip OA and in large cohorts representing a major advancement in research on musculoskeletal diseases.
Publisher MDPI
ISSN/ISBN 1424-8220
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/84249/
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.3390/s21165363
ISI-Number MEDLINE:34450828
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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20/04/2024