Kinesia with automated tremor scoring released: the first device of its kind
Wednesday, January 28th, 2009Kinesia is a system for objectively monitoring and tracking the severity of Parkinson’s disease symptoms in conjunction with clinician evaluations using the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS). The device uses tiny motion sensors (accelerometers and gyroscopes) to collect patient symptom data and, using a Bluetooth radio, wirelessly transmits that information to a PC. An addition to the system has just been released which includes automated tremor scoring based on the 0-4 scoring method of the UPDRS. Before Kinesia, there was no objective way to consistently track symptoms, making this a large advance in the way Parkinson’s disease patients are monitored.
The Kinesia patient unit is worn on the hand and wrist while patients follow video instruction for completing upper extremity motor tasks. After the completion of the tasks, algorithms in the software automatically score three tremor tasks for evaluating rest, postural and kinetic tremor on a 0-4 scale based on the UPDRS. In addition to the scoring being automated and repeatable, the scores are provided with better resolution than the whole numbers given with the UPDRS. Kinesia will assign scores such as 1.29, 3.75 or 0.84 to provide clinicians with a more exact picture of a patient’s symptoms. Reports can be generated and tremor symptom history can be viewed by their clinician, assisting them in making decisions regarding the progression of the disease, the patient’s current medication or other methods of treatment. A peer reviewed publication documenting clinical utility was accepted by The Movement Disorders Journal and is currently available online at http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/121634261/abstract
There are many other symptoms that affect PD patients outside of tremor, including bradykinesia (slowed movements or hesitations), rigidity, gait and balance issues and dyskinesias (wild, involuntary movements caused by an overabundance of dopamine in the brain – the result of a patient being overmedicated). Automated tremor scoring is only the beginning of the development of Kinesia . Researchers at CleveMed are in the process of conducting a large clinical trial involving three movement disorders centers and one hundred fifty PD patients. The data collected during this study will aid in the development of algorithms for automated scoring of bradykinesia and dyskinesias. The overall goal is to include scoring for a large majority of the motor symptoms that affect PD patients.