Validity of Accelerometry for Monitoring Real-World Arm Activity in Patients With Subacute Stroke: Evidence From the Extremity Constraint-Induced Therapy Evaluation Trial
Uswatte G, Giuliani C, Winstein C, Zeringue A, Hobbs L, Wolf SL. Validity of accelerometry for monitoring real-world arm activity in patients with subacute stroke: evidence from the Extremity Constraint-Induced Therapy Evaluation trial. To examine the psychometric properties of an objective method f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 2006-10, Vol.87 (10), p.1340-1345 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Uswatte G, Giuliani C, Winstein C, Zeringue A, Hobbs L, Wolf SL. Validity of accelerometry for monitoring real-world arm activity in patients with subacute stroke: evidence from the Extremity Constraint-Induced Therapy Evaluation trial.
To examine the psychometric properties of an objective method for assessing real-world arm activity in a large sample with subacute stroke.
Validation study.
Community.
Persons 3 to 9 months poststroke (N=169) with mild to moderate motor impairment of their hemiparetic arm enrolled in a multisite, randomized clinical trial of constraint-induced movement therapy.
Not applicable.
Participants wore an accelerometer on each arm outside the laboratory for 3 days before and after treatment or an equivalent no-treatment period. They also completed the Actual Amount of Use Test (AAUT), which is an observational measure of spontaneous more-impaired arm use, and the Motor Activity Log (MAL), which is an interview assessing more-impaired arm use in daily life.
Low-pass–filtered accelerometer recordings were reliable (
r range, >.8) and stable (
P range, >.48). Their validity was also supported. Correlations calculated across all participants at baseline between the ratio of more-impaired to less-impaired arm accelerometer recordings and AAUT and MAL scores were .60 and .52, respectively.
Accelerometry provides an objective, real-world index of more-impaired arm activity with good psychometric properties. |
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ISSN: | 0003-9993 1532-821X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apmr.2006.06.006 |