17 research outputs found

    Gait analysis with wearables predicts conversion to Parkinson disease

    Get PDF
    Objective Quantification of gait with wearable technology is promising; recent cross-sectional studies showed that gait characteristics are potential prodromal markers for Parkinson disease (PD). The aim of this longitudinal prospective observational study was to establish gait impairments and trajectories in the prodromal phase of PD, identifying which gait characteristics are potentially early diagnostic markers of PD. Methods The 696 healthy controls (mean age = 63 ± 7 years) recruited in the Tubingen Evaluation of Risk Factors for Early Detection of Neurodegeneration study were included. Assessments were performed longitudinally 4 times at 2-year intervals, and people who converted to PD were identified. Participants were asked to walk at different speeds under single and dual tasking, with a wearable device placed on the lower back; 14 validated clinically relevant gait characteristics were quantified. Cox regression was used to examine whether gait at first visit could predict time to PD conversion after controlling for age and sex. Random effects linear mixed models (RELMs) were used to establish longitudinal trajectories of gait and model the latency between impaired gait and PD diagnosis. Results Sixteen participants were diagnosed with PD on average 4.5 years after first visit (converters; PDC). Higher step time variability and asymmetry of all gait characteristics were associated with a shorter time to PD diagnosis. RELMs indicated that gait (lower pace) deviates from that of non-PDC approximately 4 years prior to diagnosis. Interpretation Together with other prodromal markers, quantitative gait characteristics can play an important role in identifying prodromal PD and progression within this phase. ANN NEUROL 2019;86:357–36

    Instrumented gait analysis identifies potential predictors for Parkinson’s disease converters [abstract]

    No full text
    Objective: This longitudinal prospective observational study investigated if gait can predict Parkinson’s disease (PD) conversion from a cohort of community-dwelling older adults. Background: PD is a progressive disorder including a prodromal period when definitive motor/non-motor symptoms to permit a diagnosis have not yet appeared. Quantification of gait with wearable technology (WT) may serve as an accurate tool to identify surrogate markers of incipient disease manifestation. Recently arm swing and selective gait characteristics measured with WT have been shown to be potential prodromal markers for people at risk for PD [1]; however these data were obtained from a cross-sectional assessment; the potential of gait to predict PD conversion has not been investigated yet in a longitudinal cohort. Methods: 16 participants (69±5 years (yrs)) who were diagnosed with PD on average 4.5 yrs after baseline assessment (converters (PDC)) and 48 age-matched old healthy adults (HA) recruited in the TREND study were included. Assessments were performed longitudinally 4 times at 2-year intervals. Participants were asked to walk at their preferred speed, performing 2 straight-line trials over 20m with a WT device placed on the lower back; 14 validated clinically relevant gait characteristics were quantified [2]. ANCOVA was used to examine gait between-group differences; the value of baseline gait in predicting PDC was explored using AUC and stepwise, forward, logistic regression analyses. Random effects linear mixed-models (RELM) were used to predict latency gait deterioration and diagnosis of PD. Results: PDC walked with significantly lower pace, higher variability and asymmetry than HA (p≤0.027). Pace, variability and asymmetry characteristics were able to significantly predict PDC (AUC≥0.695). Step time variability was the best predictor for the stepwise, forward, logistic regression (sensitivity 25%, specificity 98%, accuracy of 80%). RELMs indicate gait impairment (step velocity and step length) is evident 4-6 yrs prior to diagnosis. Conclusions: Our preliminary results suggest that pace, variability and asymmetry of gait represent sensitive predictors of prodromal PD and that gait impairment starts 4-5 years prior to diagnosis. Therefore, gait assessment may play an important role in concert with other biomarkers to identify people at high risk of PD and aid early diagnosis

    Struktureller Ultraschall des medialen Temporallappens bei Alzheimer-Demenz

    No full text
    Abstract Purpose One of the anatomical hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the atrophy of the medial temporal lobe (MTL), yet cost-effective and broadly available methodological alternatives to the current imaging tools for screening of this brain area are not currently available. Materials and Methods Using structural transcranial ultrasound (TCS), we attempted to visualize and measure the MTL, and compared the results of 32 AD patients and 84 healthy controls (HC). The MTL and the surrounding space were defined in the coronal plane on TCS. A ratio of the height of the MTL/height of the choroidal fissure (M/F) was calculated in order to obtain a regional proportion. Results An insufficient temporal bone window was identified in 22 % of the AD patients and 12 % of the HCs. The results showed that the ratio of M/F was significantly smaller in the AD group on both sides (p = 0.004 right, p = 0.007 left side). Furthermore, the M/F ratio made it possible to discriminate AD patients from HCs with a sensitivity of 83 % (right)/73 % (left) and a specificity of 76 % (right)/72 % (left) which is basically comparable to results published for magnetic resonance imaging. The measurements showed substantial intra/interrater reliability (ICC:0.79/0.69). Conclusion These results suggest that utilization of structural TCS may possibly constitute a cheap and easy-to-use supplement to other techniques for the diagnosis of AD. It may be especially useful as a screening tool in the large population of individuals with cognitive decline. Further studies are needed to validate this novel method.</jats:p

    “Sphere to Cylinder”: Pseudo-Cylindrical Projections

    No full text

    “Ellipsoid-of-Revolution to Cylinder”: Transverse Aspect

    No full text

    Map Projections of Alternative Structures: Torus, Hyperboloid, Paraboloid, Onion Shape and Others

    No full text

    C 10(3): The Ten Parameter Conformal Group as a Datum Transformation in Three-Dimensional Euclidean Space

    No full text
    corecore