4.6 Article

Monitoring Physical Activity with a Wearable Sensor in Patients with COPD during In-Hospital Pulmonary Rehabilitation Program: A Pilot Study

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21082742

Keywords

COPD; wearable sensors; SenseWear Armband; physical activity; weekday-to-weekend; energy expenditure

Funding

  1. European Respiratory Society (ERS Long-Term Research Fellowship 2020)
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa 2019-2023 Program [CEX2018-000806-S]
  3. Generalitat de Catalunya through the CERCA program

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A study of 13 patients eligible for pulmonary rehabilitation found no significant difference in physical activity levels between training days and days off, as measured by the SenseWear armband. Using physical activity sensors may help motivate patients with COPD to be more active and improve health outcomes.
Accelerometers have become a standard method of monitoring physical activity in everyday life by measuring acceleration in one, two, or three axes. These devices provide reliable and objective measurements of the duration and intensity of physical activity. We aimed to investigate whether patients undertake physical activity during non-supervised days during stationary rehabilitation and whether patients adhere to the rigor of 24 h monitoring. The second objective was to analyze the strengths and weaknesses of such kinds of sensors. The research enrolled 13 randomly selected patients, qualified for in-patient, 3 week, high-intensity, 5 times a week pulmonary rehabilitation. The SenseWear armband was used for the assessment of physical activity. Participants wore the device 24 h a day for the next 4 days (Friday-Monday). The analysis of the number of steps per day, the time spent lying as well as undertaking moderate or vigorous physical activity (>3 metabolic equivalents of task (METs)), and the energy expenditure expressed in kcal showed no statistically significant difference between the training days and the days off. It seems beneficial to use available physical activity sensors in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD); measurable parameters provide feedback that may increase the patient's motivation to be active to achieve health benefits.

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