Lower-body Total Joint Replacement Clinical Trial
Official title:
Automatic Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation System for Lower Body Total Joint Replacement
Physiotherapists spend a large amount of their time with patients observing their rehabilitation techniques. A patient going through rehabilitation exercises are routine and does not necessarily require the attention of the physiotherapist. This research will develop a sensor system that will be strapped onto the patients and will provide feedback on how accurately the exercise is being executed. This will free up the physiotherapist to focus on diagnosis and other tasks that will better utilize the physiotherapist's training. A previous study has shown that this system is feasible for healthy subjects. This study would test to see if this system is extendable to rehabilitation subjects.
Many of the tasks performed regularly by physiotherapists during any given rehabilitation
session are repetitive and do not rely on the physiotherapist's expertise, and could be
performed and observed by automated means. The developed system will detect patient body
postures and movements with data collected through sensors such as accelerometers. This data
will be pattern matched to a predetermined movement pattern and feedback will be provided
for patients regarding accuracy of their exercises. This data can be logged for the
physiotherapist to examine at a later time. By automating this component of a rehabilitation
session, the system will allow the physiotherapist to focus diagnosis and other tasks that
will better utilize their training. The specific application for this prototype will be
post-operative knee/hip replacement patients, so all devices must be non-invasive and must
not interfere with normal recovery processes.
A previous version of this experiment on healthy participants has been successfully
performed. This study would like to examine the feasibility of this system on rehabilitation
subjects, as the movement patterns of a subject in physical rehabilitation may be
dramatically different then a healthy subject. No intervention is suggested by the system,
as this study is observational.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional