Gait and balance disorders are among the main predisposing factors of falls in elderly. Clinical scales are widely employed to assess the risk of falling, but they require trained personnel. We investigate the use of objective measures obtained from a wearable accelerometer to evaluate the fall risk, determined by the Tinetti clinical scale. Seventy-nine patients and eleven volunteers were enrolled in two rehabilitation centers and underwent a full Tinetti test, while wearing a triaxial accelerometer at the chest. Tinetti scores were assessed by expert physicians and those subjects with a score ≤18 were considered at high risk. First, we analyzed 21 accelerometer features by means of statistical tests and correlation analysis. Second, one regression and one classification problem were designed and solved using a linear model (LM) and an artificial neural network (ANN) to predict the Tinetti outcome. Pearson's correlation between the Tinetti score and a subset of 9 features (mainly related with standing and walking) was 0.71. The misclassification error of high risk patient was 0.21 and 0.11, for LM and ANN, respectively. The work might foster the development of a new generation of applications meant to monitor the time evolution of the fall risk using low cost devices at home.

Evaluation of the Tinetti score and fall risk assessment via accelerometry-based movement analysis / M.W. Rivolta, M. Aktaruzzaman, G. Rizzo, C.L. Lafortuna, M. Ferrarin, G. Bovi, D.R. Bonardi, A. Caspani, R. Sassi. - In: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN MEDICINE. - ISSN 0933-3657. - 95(2019 Apr), pp. 38-47. [10.1016/j.artmed.2018.08.005]

Evaluation of the Tinetti score and fall risk assessment via accelerometry-based movement analysis

M.W. Rivolta
Primo
;
M. Aktaruzzaman;R. Sassi
2019

Abstract

Gait and balance disorders are among the main predisposing factors of falls in elderly. Clinical scales are widely employed to assess the risk of falling, but they require trained personnel. We investigate the use of objective measures obtained from a wearable accelerometer to evaluate the fall risk, determined by the Tinetti clinical scale. Seventy-nine patients and eleven volunteers were enrolled in two rehabilitation centers and underwent a full Tinetti test, while wearing a triaxial accelerometer at the chest. Tinetti scores were assessed by expert physicians and those subjects with a score ≤18 were considered at high risk. First, we analyzed 21 accelerometer features by means of statistical tests and correlation analysis. Second, one regression and one classification problem were designed and solved using a linear model (LM) and an artificial neural network (ANN) to predict the Tinetti outcome. Pearson's correlation between the Tinetti score and a subset of 9 features (mainly related with standing and walking) was 0.71. The misclassification error of high risk patient was 0.21 and 0.11, for LM and ANN, respectively. The work might foster the development of a new generation of applications meant to monitor the time evolution of the fall risk using low cost devices at home.
No
English
Fall risk; Tinetti clinical scale; Mobile-health; Healthy ageing; Artificial neural network
Settore INF/01 - Informatica
Settore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica e Informatica
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
   Sistema di Monitoraggio Ambientale con Rete di sensori e Telemonitoraggio indossabile a supporto di servizi di salute, prevenzione e sicurezza per l'Active Ageing
   SMARTA
   REGIONE LOMBARDIA
   40628684
apr-2019
6-set-2018
Elsevier
95
38
47
10
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Evaluation of the Tinetti score and fall risk assessment via accelerometry-based movement analysis / M.W. Rivolta, M. Aktaruzzaman, G. Rizzo, C.L. Lafortuna, M. Ferrarin, G. Bovi, D.R. Bonardi, A. Caspani, R. Sassi. - In: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN MEDICINE. - ISSN 0933-3657. - 95(2019 Apr), pp. 38-47. [10.1016/j.artmed.2018.08.005]
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
9
262
Article (author)
no
M.W. Rivolta, M. Aktaruzzaman, G. Rizzo, C.L. Lafortuna, M. Ferrarin, G. Bovi, D.R. Bonardi, A. Caspani, R. Sassi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/587537
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