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Wearable sensors in the diagnosis and study of Parkinson's disease symptoms: a systematic review.

Andrea C Albán-CadenaFernando Villalba-MenesesKevin O Pila-VarelaAlejandro Moreno-CalvoCarlos P Villalba-MenesesDiego A Almeida-Galárraga
Published in: Journal of medical engineering & technology (2021)
Nowadays, there are several diseases which affect different systems of the body, producing changes in the correct functioning of the organism and the people lifestyles. One of them is Parkinson's disease (PD), which is defined as a neurodegenerative disorder provoked by the destruction of dopaminergic neurons in the brain, resulting in a set of motor and non-motor symptoms. As this disease affects principally to ancient people, several researchers have studied different treatments and therapies for stopping neurodegeneration and diminishing symptoms, to improve the quality patients' lives. The most common therapies created for PD are based on pharmacological treatment for controlling the degeneration advance and the physical ones which do not reveal the progress of patients. For this reason, this review paper opens the possibility for using wearable motion capture systems as an option for the control and study of PD. Therefore, it aims to (1) study the different wearable systems used for capture the movements of PD patients and (2) determine which of them bring better results for monitoring and assess PD people. For the analysis, it uses papers based on experiments that prove the functioning of several motion systems in different aspects as monitoring, treatment and diagnose of the disease. As a result, it works with 30 papers which describe the factors mentioned before. Additionally, the paper uses journals and literature review about the pathology, its characteristics and the function of wearable sensors for the correct understanding of the topic.
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