4.6 Article

Abnormal Gait Detection Using Wearable Hall-Effect Sensors

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21041206

Keywords

gait monitoring; Hall-effect sensors; magnetic sensors; wearable sensors; gait irregularities; stride; cadence; stride width

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Abnormalities and irregularities in walking can be predicted and identified using wearable gait sensors, which offer the potential to improve care quality and diagnosis. By analyzing data collected from sensors, it was found that stride width variability and cadence can accurately differentiate abnormal or irregular strides from normal ones. This non-contact Hall-effect sensing method is highly sensitive and can detect visually imperceptible gait variability in natural settings, providing valuable information for predicting disease progression and injury recovery.
Abnormalities and irregularities in walking (gait) are predictors and indicators of both disease and injury. Gait has traditionally been monitored and analyzed in clinical settings using complex video (camera-based) systems, pressure mats, or a combination thereof. Wearable gait sensors offer the opportunity to collect data in natural settings and to complement data collected in clinical settings, thereby offering the potential to improve quality of care and diagnosis for those whose gait varies from healthy patterns of movement. This paper presents a gait monitoring system designed to be worn on the inner knee or upper thigh. It consists of low-power Hall-effect sensors positioned on one leg and a compact magnet positioned on the opposite leg. Wireless data collected from the sensor system were used to analyze stride width, stride width variability, cadence, and cadence variability for four different individuals engaged in normal gait, two types of abnormal gait, and two types of irregular gait. Using leg gap variability as a proxy for stride width variability, 81% of abnormal or irregular strides were accurately identified as different from normal stride. Cadence was surprisingly 100% accurate in identifying strides which strayed from normal, but variability in cadence provided no useful information. This highly sensitive, non-contact Hall-effect sensing method for gait monitoring offers the possibility for detecting visually imperceptible gait variability in natural settings. These nuanced changes in gait are valuable for predicting early stages of disease and also for indicating progress in recovering from injury.

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