Assessing the concurrent validity of a gait analysis system integrated into a smart walker in older adults with gait impairments.

Journal: Clinical Rehabilitation
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To assess the concurrent validity of a smart walker-integrated gait analysis system with the GAITRite® system for measuring spatiotemporal gait parameters in potential users of the smart walker.

Methods: Criterion standard validation study. Methods: Research laboratory in a geriatric hospital. Methods: Twenty-five older adults (⩾65 years) with gait impairments (habitual rollator use and/or gait speed <0.6 m/s) and no severe cognitive impairment (Mini-Mental State Examination ⩾17). Methods: Stride, swing and stance time; stride length; and gait speed were simultaneously recorded using the smart walker-integrated gait analysis system and the GAITRite system while participants walked along a 7.8-m walkway with the smart walker. Concurrent criterion-related validity was assessed using the Bland-Altman method, percentage errors (acceptable if <30%), and intraclass correlation coefficients for consistency (ICC3,1) and absolute agreement (ICC2,1).

Results: Bias for stride, swing and stance time ranged from -0.04 to 0.04 seconds, with acceptable percentage errors (8.7%-23.0%). Stride length and gait speed showed higher bias (meanbias (SD) = 0.20 (0.11) m; 0.19 (0.13) m/s) and not acceptable percentage errors (31.3%-42.3%). Limits of agreement were considerably narrower for temporal than for spatial-related gait parameters. All gait parameters showed good-to-excellent consistency (ICC3,1 = 0.72-0.97). Absolute agreement was good-to-excellent for temporal (ICC2,1 = 0.72-0.97) but only poor-to-fair for spatial-related gait parameters (ICC2,1 = 0.37-0.52).

Conclusions: The smart walker-integrated gait analysis system has good concurrent validity with the GAITRite system for measuring temporal but not spatial-related gait parameters in potential end-users of the smart walker. Stride length and gait speed can be measured with good consistency, but with only limited absolute accuracy.

Authors
Christian Werner, Georgia Chalvatzaki, Xanthi Papageorgiou, Costas Tzafestas, Jürgen Bauer, Klaus Hauer