Frontiers in Neurology (Jan 2019)

A Smart Device System to Identify New Phenotypical Characteristics in Movement Disorders

  • Julian Varghese,
  • Stephan Niewöhner,
  • Iñaki Soto-Rey,
  • Stephanie Schipmann-Miletić,
  • Nils Warneke,
  • Tobias Warnecke,
  • Martin Dugas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.00048
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Parkinson's disease and Essential Tremor are two of the most common movement disorders and are still associated with high rates of misdiagnosis. Collected data by technology-based objective measures (TOMs) has the potential to provide new promising and highly accurate movement data for a better understanding of phenotypical characteristics and diagnostic support. A technology-based system called Smart Device System (SDS) is going to be implemented for multi-modal high-resolution acceleration measurement of patients with PD or ET within a clinical setting. The 2-year prospective observational study is conducted to identify new phenotypical biomarkers and train an Artificial Intelligence System. The SDS is going to be integrated and tested within a 20-min assessment including smartphone-based questionnaires, two smartwatches at both wrists and tablet-based Archimedean spirals drawing for deeper tremor-analyses. The electronic questionnaires will cover data on medication, family history and non-motor symptoms. In this paper, we describe the steps for this novel technology-utilizing examination, the principal steps for data analyses and the targeted performances of the system. Future work considers integration with Deep Brain Stimulation, dissemination into further sites and patient's home setting as well as integration with further data sources as neuroimaging and biobanks. Study Registration ID on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03638479.

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