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Assessment of Thigh Angular Velocity by an Activity Monitor to Describe Sit-to-Stand Performance.

Jochen KlenkAlassane BaKim Sarah SczukaUrban DaubUlrich Lindemann
Published in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The assessment of sit-to-stand (STS) performance is highly relevant, especially in older persons, but testing STS performance in the laboratory does not necessarily reflect STS performance in daily life. Therefore, the aim was to validate a wearable sensor-based measure to be used under unsupervised daily life conditions. Since thigh orientation from horizontal to vertical is characteristic for STS movement, peak angular velocity (PAV) of the thigh was chosen as the outcome variable. A total of 20 younger and older healthy persons and geriatric patients (mean age: 55.5 ± 20.8 years; 55% women) with a wide range of STS performance were instructed to stand up from a chair at their usual pace. STS performance was measured by an activity monitor, force plates, and an opto-electronic system. The association between PAV measured by the thigh-worn activity monitor and PAV measured by the opto-electronic system (gold standard) was r = 0.74. The association between PAV measured by the thigh-worn activity monitor and peak power measured by force plate and opto-electronic system was r = 0.76. The Intra-Class Coefficient (ICC) of agreement between the 2 trials was ICC (A,1) = 0.76. In this sample of persons with a wide range of physical performance, PAV as measured by a thigh-worn acceleration sensor was a valid and reliable measure of STS performance.
Keyphrases
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