scholarly journals Calibration and Evaluation of a Force Measurement Glove for Field-Based Monitoring of Manual Wheelchair Users

Author(s):  
Anthony Anderson ◽  
Alexander W. Hooke ◽  
Chandrasekaran Jayaraman ◽  
Adam Burns ◽  
Emma Fortune ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Anderson ◽  
Alexander W. Hooke ◽  
Chandrasekaran Jayaraman ◽  
Adam Burns ◽  
Emma Fortune ◽  
...  

AbstractManual wheelchair users exhibit pain related to repetitive and demanding shoulder activities of daily living. Wearable sensing systems like force measurement gloves can provide insights about upper extremity loading in the community and home environments. We calibrated and evaluated the accuracy of a novel force measurement glove with a body-worn data logger. The device was calibrated with loads of 0-800 N applied to the palmar surface of the glove. Calibration conditions were tested that varied the stiffness of the material in the glove, the temperature, and the curvature of the force applicator. Calibration equations from each condition were evaluated by comparing the glove’s force prediction with the output of an instrumented wheelchair rim during propulsion and weight relief exercises. The force measurement glove detected 72.7% of 355 propulsion peaks and had a strong linear correlation with the instrumented rim force measurements (r=0.80). The most accurate calibration equation was constructed using data from all conditions, with an RMS force measurement error of 64.7 N and 31.7 N for weight relief exercise and propulsion, respectively. The force measurement glove design described here may serve as a useful tool for detection of loading events and relative magnitude changes.


BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. e044152
Author(s):  
Mokgadi Kholofelo Mashola ◽  
Elzette Korkie ◽  
Diphale Joyce Mothabeng

IntroductionApproximately 80% of people with spinal cord injury experience clinically significant chronic pain. Pain (whether musculoskeletal or neuropathic) is consistently rated as one of the most difficult problems to manage and negatively affects the individual’s physical, psychological and social functioning and increases the risk of pain medication misuse and poor mental health. The aim of this study is to therefore determine the presence of pain and its impact on functioning and disability as well as to develop a framework for self-management of pain for South African manual wheelchair users with spinal cord injury.Methods and analysisCommunity-dwelling participants with spinal cord injury will be invited to participate in this three-phase study. Phase 1 will use a quantitative, correlational design to determine factors related to pain such as pectoralis minor length, scapular dyskinesis, wheelchair functioning, physical quality of life, community reintegration and pain medication misuse. Demographic determinants of pain such as age, gender, type of occupation, completeness of injury and neurological level of injury will also be investigated. Participants with pain identified in phase 1 will be invited to partake in a qualitative descriptive and contextually designed phase 2 to explore their lived experience of pain through in-depth interviews. The results of phases 1 and 2 will then be used with the assistance from experts to develop a framework for self-management of pain using a modified Delphi study. Data analysis will include descriptive and inferential statistics (quantitative data) and thematic content analysis (qualitative data).Ethics and disseminationApproval for this study is granted by the Faculty of Health Sciences Research Ethics Committee of the University of the Pretoria (approval number 125/2018). This study is registered with the South African National Health Research Database (reference GP201806005). This study’s findings will be shared in academic conferences and published in scientific peer-reviewed journals.


2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 341 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffroy Hubert ◽  
Michel Tousignant ◽  
Fran�ois Routhier ◽  
H�l�ne Corriveau ◽  
No�l Champagne

PM&R ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 483-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan L. Deems-Dluhy ◽  
Chandrasekaran Jayaraman ◽  
Steve Green ◽  
Mark V. Albert ◽  
Arun Jayaraman

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 788-791 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Passuni ◽  
Elisa Dalzotto ◽  
Christian F. Gath ◽  
Eliana Buffetti ◽  
Milagros Elizalde ◽  
...  

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