IEEE Access (Jan 2021)

Computerized Screening of Essential Tremor and Level of Severity Using Consumer Tablet

  • Mohammod Abdul Motin,
  • James Peters,
  • Laura Perju-Dumbrava,
  • Catherine Ding,
  • Michael Eller,
  • Sanjay Raghav,
  • Sheik Mohammed Ali,
  • Peter Kempster,
  • PJ Radcliffe,
  • Dinesh Kant Kumar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3052186
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 15404 – 15412

Abstract

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Essential tremor (ET) is diagnosed and monitored by movement disorder specialists based on clinical observations. While many ET cases are benign, some require pharmacological and surgical management, and there is a need for tools to assist clinicians in making informed decisions. This work aimed to develop a computerized technique to detect the presence and severity of ET. A set of 6 writing and sketching tasks were performed by 39 subjects on a digital tablet. The position and pressure of contact during the sketching were recorded and analyzed to obtain the dynamics of drawing. ET patients were scored on the Fahn-Tolosa-Marin Tremor Rating Scale by blinded movement disorder neurologists, and then separated into two groups: moderate and severe ET. Drawing tasks were more effective than writing tasks in distinguishing the groups, with drawing horizontal and vertical lines being the most sensitive. A new set of composite index feature was found to be most suitable in separating the three groups, with a Spearman correlation coefficient of 0.72. The technique shows significant differences between controls, patients with moderate tremor and those with severe tremor, with an accuracy of 87.2%. Our computerized analysis significantly outperformed non-specialist clinicians in differentiating ET from control. We conclude that computerized analysis of the dynamics of sketching horizontal and vertical lines is a suitable method to assess the presence and severity of ET.

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