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Article

Investigating the AX6 inertial-based wearable for instrumented physical capability assessment of young adults in a low-resource setting

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Citation

Powell D, Nouredanesh M, Stuart S & Godfrey A (2021) Investigating the AX6 inertial-based wearable for instrumented physical capability assessment of young adults in a low-resource setting. Smart Health, 22, Art. No.: 100220. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.smhl.2021.100220

Abstract
Instrumented balance and gait test are an important component of physical capability assessment in clinical examinations. This study provides insight to a new generation Open Movement inertial-based wearable (AX6, Axivity, UK) compared to a previously validated reference (AX3). The AX6 was assessed for its ability to quantify a battery of tasks that represent a composite physical capability assessment. Participants wore both wearables on the lower back (5th lumbar vertebrae) continuously throughout the testing period. No significant differences (p < 0.05) were found between the AX6 and reference wearable (AX3) for time taken to complete the following tasks: 4-m walk (p = 0.18), sit to stand (p = 0.05), and timed up and go (p = 0.55). Bland-Altman analysis plots suggest good to excellent agreement between the AX6 and reference (AX3) device with low discrepancy in mean differences and narrow limits of agreement. Significant differences were found between the AX6 and manual recorded times in the 4-m walk test and 2-min walk test, and no significant differences in sit-to-stand and timed-up-and- go were observed. Temporal data for both wearables were compared with no differences in step time, stride time, swing time and stance time. Differences were observed for spatial digital biomarker/characteristic (step length). This study shows the AX6 to be a reliable device for objectively quantifying data from physical capability tasks. These findings also reinforce the advantages of using open source, instrumented testing and methods for physical capability and disease monitoring.

Keywords
Inertial measurement unit; Instrumentation; Physical capability; Wearables

Journal
Smart Health: Volume 22

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date30/11/2021
Publication date online31/10/2021
Date accepted by journal18/10/2021
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN2352-6483
eISSN2352-6491

People (1)

Dr Dylan Powell

Dr Dylan Powell

Lecturer in Public Health & Innovation, Health Sciences Stirling