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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 24(9)2024 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38732998

RESUMO

Biomechanical assessments of running typically take place inside motion capture laboratories. However, it is unclear whether data from these in-lab gait assessments are representative of gait during real-world running. This study sought to test how well real-world gait patterns are represented by in-lab gait data in two cohorts of runners equipped with consumer-grade wearable sensors measuring speed, step length, vertical oscillation, stance time, and leg stiffness. Cohort 1 (N = 49) completed an in-lab treadmill run plus five real-world runs of self-selected distances on self-selected courses. Cohort 2 (N = 19) completed a 2.4 km outdoor run on a known course plus five real-world runs of self-selected distances on self-selected courses. The degree to which in-lab gait reflected real-world gait was quantified using univariate overlap and multivariate depth overlap statistics, both for all real-world running and for real-world running on flat, straight segments only. When comparing in-lab and real-world data from the same subject, univariate overlap ranged from 65.7% (leg stiffness) to 95.2% (speed). When considering all gait metrics together, only 32.5% of real-world data were well-represented by in-lab data from the same subject. Pooling in-lab gait data across multiple subjects led to greater distributional overlap between in-lab and real-world data (depth overlap 89.3-90.3%) due to the broader variability in gait seen across (as opposed to within) subjects. Stratifying real-world running to only include flat, straight segments did not meaningfully increase the overlap between in-lab and real-world running (changes of <1%). Individual gait patterns during real-world running, as characterized by consumer-grade wearable sensors, are not well-represented by the same runner's in-lab data. Researchers and clinicians should consider "borrowing" information from a pool of many runners to predict individual gait behavior when using biomechanical data to make clinical or sports performance decisions.


Assuntos
Marcha , Corrida , Humanos , Corrida/fisiologia , Marcha/fisiologia , Masculino , Fenômenos Biomecânicos/fisiologia , Feminino , Adulto , Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis , Adulto Jovem , Análise da Marcha/métodos
2.
Clin Neuropsychol ; : 1-16, 2024 Feb 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38369458

RESUMO

Objective: The goal of this study was to characterize normative scores for the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18) in collegiate athletes to inform decision making about the need for psychological health services in this group. Methods: Collegiate student-athletes (N = 20,034) from 25 universities completed the BSI-18 at their preseason baseline assessment. A subgroup (n = 5,387) underwent multiple baseline assessments. Global Severity Index (GSI) scores were compared to community norms and across multiple timepoints. Results: Collegiate athletes reported significantly lower GSI scores than published community norms (p<.001). Published GSI threshold scores for "caseness", identified only 2 per 100 athletes (≥ the 98th percentile) as needing further evaluation. Using a GSI score ≥ than the cohort's 90th percentile, 11.4 per 100 athletes would merit additional evaluation. These individuals were more likely to report a history of psychiatric diagnosis (Odds ratio [95% CI] 2.745 [2.480, 3.039]), as well as ≥ 2 prior concussions (p<.001). GSI scores were not highly correlated across timepoints. Suicidal ideation was rare (n = 230; 1.15%). Conclusions: For collegiate student-athletes, published BSI-18 threshold scores identify only extreme outliers who might benefit from additional behavioral health evaluation. Alternatively, use of threshold scores ≥ the 90th percentile identifies a more realistic 11.4% of the population, with higher likelihood of prior concussion and/or psychiatric disorders.

3.
Neurology ; 102(2): e207991, 2024 Jan 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38165315

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The objective was to characterize the acute effects of concussion (a subset of mild traumatic brain injury) on serum interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-1 receptor antagonist (RA) and 5 additional inflammatory markers in athletes and military service academy members from the Concussion Assessment, Research, and Education Consortium and to determine whether these markers aid in discrimination of concussed participants from controls. METHODS: Athletes and cadets with concussion and matched controls provided blood at baseline and postinjury visits between January 2015 and March 2020. Linear models investigated changes in inflammatory markers measured using Meso Scale Discovery assays across time points (baseline and 0-12, 12-36, 36-60 hours). Subanalyses were conducted in participants split by sex and injury population. Logistic regression analyses tested whether acute levels of IL-6 and IL-1RA improved discrimination of concussed participants relative to brain injury markers (glial fibrillary acidic protein, tau, neurofilament light, ubiquitin c-terminal hydrolase-L1) or clinical data (Sport Concussion Assessment Tool-Third Edition, Standardized Assessment of Concussion, Balance Error Scoring System). RESULTS: Participants with concussion (total, N = 422) had elevated IL-6 and IL-1RA at 0-12 hours vs controls (n = 345; IL-6: mean difference [MD] (standard error) = 0.701 (0.091), p < 0.0001; IL-1RA: MD = 0.283 (0.042), p < 0.0001) and relative to baseline (IL-6: MD = 0.656 (0.078), p < 0.0001; IL-1RA: MD = 0.242 (0.038), p < 0.0001), 12-36 hours (IL-6: MD = 0.609 (0.086), p < 0.0001; IL-1RA: MD = 0.322 (0.041), p < 0.0001), and 36-60 hours (IL-6: MD = 0.818 (0.084), p < 0.0001; IL-1RA: MD = 0.317 (0.040), p < 0.0001). IL-6 and IL-1RA were elevated in participants with sport (IL-6: MD = 0.748 (0.115), p < 0.0001; IL-1RA: MD = 0.304 (0.055), p < 0.0001) and combative-related concussions (IL-6: MD = 0.583 (0.178), p = 0.001; IL-1RA: MD = 0.312 (0.081), p = 0.0001). IL-6 was elevated in male (MD = 0.734 (0.105), p < 0.0001) and female participants (MD = 0.600 (0.177), p = 0.0008); IL-1RA was only elevated in male participants (MD = 0.356 (0.047), p < 0.0001). Logistic regression showed the inclusion of IL-6 and IL-1RA at 0-12 hours improved the discrimination of participants with concussion from controls relative to brain injury markers (χ2(2) = 17.855, p = 0.0001; area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] 0.73 [0.66-0.80] to 0.78 [0.71-0.84]), objective clinical measures (balance and cognition; χ2(2) = 40.661, p < 0.0001; AUC 0.81 [0.76-0.86] to 0.87 [0.83-0.91]), and objective and subjective measures combined (χ2(2) = 13.456, p = 0.001; AUC 0.97 [0.95-0.99] to 0.98 [0.96-0.99]), although improvement in AUC was only significantly relative to objective clinical measures. DISCUSSION: IL-6 and IL-1RA (male participants only) are elevated in the early-acute window postconcussion and may aid in diagnostic decisions beyond traditional blood markers and common clinical measures. IL-1RA results highlight sex differences in the immune response to concussion which should be considered in future biomarker work.


Assuntos
Concussão Encefálica , Lesões Encefálicas , Militares , Feminino , Masculino , Humanos , Concussão Encefálica/diagnóstico , Proteína Antagonista do Receptor de Interleucina 1 , Interleucina-6 , Atletas , Inflamação , Biomarcadores
4.
J Autism Dev Disord ; 54(4): 1517-1526, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36637594

RESUMO

This study examined the concordance between accelerometry-measured and self-reported physical activity (PA) and sedentary time in adults with autism. Twenty-four participants wore an ActiGraph GT3X + accelerometer for seven consecutive days and completed the International Physical Activity Questionnaire-Short Form (IPAQ-SF) on the last day of their study participation. Bland-Altman plots assessed the magnitude of agreement between the two measures. Nearly 80% of the participants accumulated the recommended ≥ 150 min of moderate to vigorous PA (MVPA)/week, but were also sedentary for over nine hours/day according to accelerometry data. Findings showed that adults with autism tended to overreport MVPA (b = 1.606, p < 0.01) and underreport sedentary time (b = 1.161, p = 0.03) via the IPAQ-SF, as compared to objective measurements.


Assuntos
Transtorno do Espectro Autista , Transtorno Autístico , Adulto , Humanos , Autorrelato , Comportamento Sedentário , Inquéritos e Questionários , Exercício Físico , Acelerometria
5.
Neuropsychopharmacology ; 49(2): 396-404, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37550441

RESUMO

High-intensity sweet-liking has been linked to alcohol use disorder (AUD) risk. However, the neural underpinning of this association is poorly understood. To find a biomarker predictive of AUD, 140 participants (social and heavy drinkers, ages 21-26) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during a monetary incentive delay (MID) task and stimulation with high (SucroseHigh)- and low-concentration sucrose, as well as viscosity-matched water. On another day after imaging, and just before free-access intravenous alcohol self-administration, participants experienced a 30 mg% alcohol prime (10 min ascent) using the Computerized Alcohol Infusion System. Principal component analysis (PCA) of subjective responses (SR) to the prime's ascending limb generated enjoyable (SRenjoy) and sedative (SRsed) intoxication components. Another PCA created one component reflective of self-administered alcohol exposure (AE) over 90 min. Component loadings were entered as regressors in a voxel-wise general linear fMRI model, with reward type as a fixed factor. By design, peak prime breath alcohol concentration was similar across participants (29 ± 3.4 mg%). SRenjoy on the prime's ascending limb correlated positively with [SucroseHigh > Water] in the supplementary motor area and right dorsal anterior insula, implicating the salience network. Neither SR component correlated with the brain's response to MID. AE was unrelated to brain reward activation. While these findings do not support a relationship between alcohol self-administration and (1) subjective liking of or (2) regional brain response to an intensely sweet taste, they show that alcohol's enjoyable intoxicating effects on the rising limb correspond with anterior insular and supplementary motor area responses to high-concentration sucrose taste. No such associations were observed with MID despite robust activation in those regions. Insula and supplementary motor area responses to intense sensations relate to a known risk factor for AUD in a way that is not apparent with a secondary (monetary) reward.


Assuntos
Alcoolismo , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Paladar/fisiologia , Etanol , Alcoolismo/diagnóstico por imagem , Recompensa , Sacarose , Água
7.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 71(4): 1378-1390, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37995175

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: We address the problem of finding brain connectivities that are associated with a clinical outcome or phenotype. METHODS: The proposed framework regresses a (scalar) clinical outcome on matrix-variate predictors which arise in the form of brain connectivity matrices. For example, in a large cohort of subjects we estimate those regions of functional connectivities that are associated with neurocognitive scores. We approach this high-dimensional yet highly structured estimation problem by formulating a regularized estimation process that results in a low-rank coefficient matrix having a sparse set of nonzero entries which represent regions of biologically relevant connectivities. In contrast to the recent literature on estimating a sparse, low-rank matrix from a single noisy observation, our scalar-on-matrix regression framework produces a data-driven extraction of structures that are associated with a clinical response. The method, called Sparsity Inducing Nuclear-Norm Estimator (SpINNEr), simultaneously constrains the regression coefficient matrix in two ways: a nuclear norm penalty encourages low-rank structure while an l1 norm encourages entry-wise sparsity. RESULTS: Our simulations show that SpINNEr outperforms other methods in estimation accuracy when the response-related entries (representing the brain's functional connectivity) are arranged in well-connected communities. SpINNEr is applied to investigate associations between HIV-related outcomes and functional connectivity in the human brain. CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: Overall, this work demonstrates the potential of SpINNEr to recover sparse and low-rank estimates under scalar-on-matrix regression framework.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Encéfalo , Humanos , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Encéfalo/fisiologia
8.
Sports Med ; 2023 Nov 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37938533

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Molecular-based approaches to understanding concussion pathophysiology provide complex biological information that can advance concussion research and identify potential diagnostic and/or prognostic biomarkers of injury. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to identify gene expression changes in peripheral blood that are initiated following concussion and are relevant to concussion response and recovery. METHODS: We analyzed whole blood transcriptomes in a large cohort of concussed and control collegiate athletes who were participating in the multicenter prospective cohort Concussion Assessment, Research, and Education (CARE) Consortium study. Blood samples were collected from collegiate athletes at preseason (baseline), within 6 h of concussion injury, and at four additional prescribed time points spanning 24 h to 6 months post-injury. RNA sequencing was performed on samples from 230 concussed, 130 contact control, and 102 non-contact control athletes. Differential gene expression and deconvolution analysis were performed at each time point relative to baseline. RESULTS: Cytokine and immune response signaling pathways were activated immediately after concussion, but at later time points these pathways appeared to be suppressed relative to the contact control group. We also found that the proportion of neutrophils increased and natural killer cells decreased in the blood following concussion. CONCLUSIONS: Transcriptome signatures in the blood reflect the known pathophysiology of concussion and may be useful for defining the immediate biological response and the time course for recovery. In addition, the identified immune response pathways and changes in immune cell type proportions following a concussion may inform future treatment strategies.

9.
Aging Cell ; : e14015, 2023 Oct 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37843879

RESUMO

Performance fatigability is typically experienced as insufficient energy to complete daily physical tasks, particularly with advancing age, often progressing toward dependency. Thus, understanding the etiology of performance fatigability, especially cellular-level biological mechanisms, may help to delay the onset of mobility disability. We hypothesized that skeletal muscle energetics may be important contributors to performance fatigability. Participants in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging completed a usual-paced 400-m walk wearing a wrist-worn ActiGraph GT9X to derive the Pittsburgh Performance Fatigability Index (PPFI, higher scores = more severe fatigability) that quantifies percent decline in individual cadence-versus-time trajectory from their maximal cadence. Complex I&II-supported maximal oxidative phosphorylation (max OXPHOS) and complex I&II-supported electron transfer system (max ETS) were quantified ex vivo using high-resolution respirometry in permeabilized fiber bundles from vastus lateralis muscle biopsies. Maximal adenosine triphosphate production (ATPmax ) was assessed in vivo by 31 P magnetic resonance spectroscopy. We conducted tobit regressions to examine associations of max OXPHOS, max ETS, and ATPmax with PPFI, adjusting for technician/site, demographic characteristics, and total activity count over 7-day free-living among older adults (N = 795, 70-94 years, 58% women) with complete PPFI scores and ≥1 energetics measure. Median PPFI score was 1.4% [25th-75th percentile: 0%-2.9%]. After full adjustment, each 1 standard deviation lower max OXPHOS, max ETS, and ATPmax were associated with 0.55 (95% CI: 0.26-0.84), 0.39 (95% CI: 0.09-0.70), and 0.54 (95% CI: 0.27-0.81) higher PPFI score, respectively. Our findings suggested that therapeutics targeting muscle energetics may potentially mitigate fatigability and lessen susceptibility to disability among older adults.

10.
Front Neurol ; 14: 1202967, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37662031

RESUMO

Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate phosphorylated tau (p-tau181) protein in plasma in a cohort of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) patients and a cohort of concussed athletes. Methods: This pilot study comprised two independent cohorts. The first cohort-part of a Traumatic Head Injury Neuroimaging Classification (THINC) study-with a mean age of 46 years was composed of uninjured controls (UIC, n = 30) and mTBI patients (n = 288) recruited from the emergency department with clinical computed tomography (CT) and research magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings. The second cohort-with a mean age of 19 years-comprised 133 collegiate athletes with (n = 112) and without (n = 21) concussions. The participants enrolled in the second cohort were a part of a multicenter, prospective, case-control study conducted by the NCAA-DoD Concussion Assessment, Research and Education (CARE) Consortium at six CARE Advanced Research Core (ARC) sites between 2015 and 2019. Blood was collected within 48 h of injury for both cohorts. Plasma concentration (pg/ml) of p-tau181 was measured using the Single Molecule Array ultrasensitive assay. Results: Concentrations of plasma p-tau181 in both cohorts were significantly elevated compared to controls within 48 h of injury, with the highest concentrations of p-tau181 within 18 h of injury, with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.690-0.748, respectively, in distinguishing mTBI patients and concussed athletes from controls. Among the mTBI patients, the levels of plasma p-tau181 were significantly higher in patients with positive neuroimaging (either CT+/MRI+, n = 74 or CT-/MRI+, n = 89) compared to mTBI patients with negative neuroimaging (CT-/MRI-, n = 111) findings and UIC (P-values < 0.05). Conclusion: These findings indicate that plasma p-tau181 concentrations likely relate to brain injury, with the highest levels in patients with neuroimaging evidence of injury. Future research is needed to replicate and validate this protein assay's performance as a possible early diagnostic biomarker for mTBI/concussions.

11.
iScience ; 26(9): 107624, 2023 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37694156

RESUMO

Functional connectomes (FCs) containing pairwise estimations of functional couplings between pairs of brain regions are commonly represented by correlation matrices. As symmetric positive definite matrices, FCs can be transformed via tangent space projections, resulting into tangent-FCs. Tangent-FCs have led to more accurate models predicting brain conditions or aging. Motivated by the fact that tangent-FCs seem to be better biomarkers than FCs, we hypothesized that tangent-FCs have also a higher fingerprint. We explored the effects of six factors: fMRI condition, scan length, parcellation granularity, reference matrix, main-diagonal regularization, and distance metric. Our results showed that identification rates are systematically higher when using tangent-FCs across the "fingerprint gradient" (here including test-retest, monozygotic and dizygotic twins). Highest identification rates were achieved when minimally (0.01) regularizing FCs while performing tangent space projection using Riemann reference matrix and using correlation distance to compare the resulting tangent-FCs. Such configuration was validated in a second dataset (resting-state).

12.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci ; 78(12): 2387-2395, 2023 12 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37566383

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The Pittsburgh Performance Fatigability Index (PPFI) quantifies the percent decline in cadence using accelerometry during standardized walking tasks. Although PPFI has shown strong correlations with physical performance, the developmental sample was relatively homogenous and small, necessitating further validation. METHODS: Participants from the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (N = 805, age = 76.4 ±â€…5.0 years, 58% women, 85% White) wore an ActiGraph GT9X on the nondominant wrist during usual-paced 400 m walk. Tri-axial accelerations were analyzed to compute PPFI (higher score = greater fatigability). To evaluate construct and discriminant validity, Spearman correlations (rs) between PPFI and gait speed, Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB), chair stand speed, leg peak power, VO2peak, perceived fatigability, and mood were examined. Sex-specific PPFI cut-points that optimally discriminated gait speed using classification and regression tree were then generated. Their discriminate power in relation to aforementioned physical performance were further evaluated. RESULTS: Median PPFI score was 1.4% (25th-75th percentile range: 0%-21.7%), higher among women than men (p < .001). PPFI score was moderate-to-strongly correlated with gait speed (rs = -0.75), SPPB score (rs = -0.38), chair stand speed (rs = -0.36), leg peak power (rs = -0.34) and VO2peak (rs = -0.40), and less strongly with perceived fatigability (rs = 0.28-0.29), all p < .001. PPFI score was not correlated with mood (|rs| < 0.08). Sex-specific PPFI cut-points (no performance fatigability: PPFI = 0%; mild performance fatigability: 0% < PPFI < 3.5% [women], 0% < PPFI < 5.4% [men]; moderate-to-severe performance fatigability: PPFI ≥ 3.5% [women], PPFI ≥ 5.4% [men]) discriminated physical performance (all p < .001), adjusted for demographics and smoking status. CONCLUSION: Our work underscores the utility of PPFI as a valid measure to quantify performance fatigability in future longitudinal epidemiologic studies and clinical/pharmaceutical trials.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento , Avaliação Geriátrica , Masculino , Idoso , Humanos , Feminino , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Fadiga , Caminhada/fisiologia , Músculos
13.
iScience ; 26(6): 106948, 2023 Jun 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37332596

RESUMO

Cannabis use has become popular among athletes, many of whom are exposed to repetitive subconcussive head impacts. We aimed to test whether chronic cannabis use would be neuroprotective or exacerbating against acute subconcussive head impacts. This trial included 43 adult soccer players (Cannabis group using cannabis at least once a week for the past 6 months, n = 24; non-cannabis control group, n = 19). Twenty soccer headings, induced by our controlled heading model, significantly impaired ocular-motor function, but the degrees of impairments were less in the cannabis group compared to controls. The control group significantly increased its serum S100B level after heading, whereas no change was observed in the cannabis group. There was no group difference in serum neurofilament light levels at any time point. Our data suggest that chronic cannabis use may be associated with an enhancement of oculomotor functional resiliency and suppression of the neuroinflammatory response following 20 soccer headings.

14.
Neurology ; 101(2): e189-e201, 2023 07 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37328299

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: To study longitudinal associations between blood-based neural biomarkers (including total tau, neurofilament light [NfL], glial fibrillary acidic protein [GFAP], and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase-L1) and white matter neuroimaging biomarkers in collegiate athletes with sport-related concussion (SRC) from 24 hours postinjury to 1 week after return to play. METHODS: We analyzed clinical and imaging data of concussed collegiate athletes in the Concussion Assessment, Research, and Education (CARE) Consortium. The CARE participants completed same-day clinical assessments, blood draws, and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) at 3 time points: 24-48 hours postinjury, point of becoming asymptomatic, and 7 days after return to play. DTI probabilistic tractography was performed for each participant at each time point to render 27 participant-specific major white matter tracts. The microstructural organization of these tracts was characterized by 4 DTI metrics. Mixed-effects models with random intercepts were applied to test whether white matter microstructural abnormalities are associated with the blood-based biomarkers at the same time point. An interaction model was used to test whether the association varies across time points. A lagged model was used to test whether early blood-based biomarkers predict later microstructural changes. RESULTS: Data from 77 collegiate athletes were included in the following analyses. Among the 4 blood-based biomarkers, total tau had significant associations with the DTI metrics across the 3 time points. In particular, high tau level was associated with high radial diffusivity (RD) in the right corticospinal tract (ß = 0.25, SE = 0.07, p FDR-adjusted = 0.016) and superior thalamic radiation (ß = 0.21, SE = 0.07, p FDR-adjusted = 0.042). NfL and GFAP had time-dependent associations with the DTI metrics. NfL showed significant associations only at the asymptomatic time point (|ß|s > 0.12, SEs <0.09, psFDR-adjusted < 0.05) and GFAP showed a significant association only at 7 days after return to play (ßs > 0.14, SEs <0.06, psFDR-adjusted < 0.05). The p values for the associations of early tau and later RD were not significant after multiple comparison adjustment, but were less than 0.1 in 7 white matter tracts. DISCUSSION: This prospective study using data from the CARE Consortium demonstrated that in the early phase of SRC, white matter microstructural integrity detected by DTI neuroimaging was associated with elevated levels of blood-based biomarkers of traumatic brain injury. Total tau in the blood showed the strongest association with white matter microstructural changes.


Assuntos
Traumatismos em Atletas , Concussão Encefálica , Futebol Americano , Substância Branca , Humanos , Substância Branca/diagnóstico por imagem , Imagem de Tensor de Difusão/métodos , Traumatismos em Atletas/diagnóstico por imagem , Estudos Prospectivos , Concussão Encefálica/diagnóstico por imagem , Futebol Americano/lesões , Biomarcadores
15.
Gait Posture ; 103: 92-98, 2023 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37150053

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Identifying an individual from accelerometry data collected during walking without reliance on step-cycle detection has not been achieved with high accuracy. RESEARCH QUESTION: We propose an open-source reproducible method to: (1) create a unique, person-specific "walking fingerprint" from a sample of un-landmarked high-resolution data collected by a wrist-worn accelerometer; and (2) predict who an individual is from their walking fingerprint. METHODS: Accelerometry data were collected during walking from 32 individuals (23-52 y.o., 19 females) for at least 380 s each. For this study's purpose, data are not landmarked, nor synchronized. Individual walking fingerprints were created by: (1) partitioning the accelerometer time series in adjacent, non-overlapping one-second intervals; (2) transforming all one-second interval data for a given individual into a three-dimensional (3D) image obtained by plotting each one-second interval time series by the lagged time series for a series of lags; (3) partitioning these resulting participant-specific 3D images into a grid of cells; and (4) identifying the combinations of cells (areas in the 3D image) that best predict the individual. For every participant, the first 200 s of data were used as training and the last 180 s as testing. This approach does not use segmentation methods for individual strides, which reduces dependence on complementary algorithms and increases its generalizability. RESULTS: The method correctly identified 100 % of the participants in the test data and highlighted unique features of walking that characterize the individuals. SIGNIFICANCE: Predicting the identity of an individual from their walking pattern has immediate implications that can complement or replace those of actual fingerprinting, voice, and image recognition. Furthermore, as walking may change with age or disease burden, individual walking fingerprints may be used as biomarkers of change in health status with potential clinical and epidemiologic implications.


Assuntos
Exercício Físico , Punho , Feminino , Humanos , Caminhada , Articulação do Punho , Acelerometria/métodos
17.
Brain ; 146(10): 4262-4273, 2023 10 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37070698

RESUMO

The neurotrophic herpes virus cytomegalovirus is a known cause of neuropathology in utero and in immunocompromised populations. Cytomegalovirus is reactivated by stress and inflammation, possibly explaining the emerging evidence linking it to subtle brain changes in the context of more minor disturbances of immune function. Even mild forms of traumatic brain injury, including sport-related concussion, are major physiological stressors that produce neuroinflammation. In theory, concussion could predispose to the reactivation of cytomegalovirus and amplify the effects of physical injury on brain structure. However, to our knowledge this hypothesis remains untested. This study evaluated the effect of cytomegalovirus serostatus on white and grey matter structure in a prospective study of athletes with concussion and matched contact-sport controls. Athletes who sustained concussion (n = 88) completed MRI at 1, 8, 15 and 45 days post-injury; matched uninjured athletes (n = 73) completed similar visits. Cytomegalovirus serostatus was determined by measuring serum IgG antibodies (n = 30 concussed athletes and n = 21 controls were seropositive). Inverse probability of treatment weighting was used to adjust for confounding factors between athletes with and without cytomegalovirus. White matter microstructure was assessed using diffusion kurtosis imaging metrics in regions previously shown to be sensitive to concussion. T1-weighted images were used to quantify mean cortical thickness and total surface area. Concussion-related symptoms, psychological distress, and serum concentration of C-reactive protein at 1 day post-injury were included as exploratory outcomes. Planned contrasts compared the effects of cytomegalovirus seropositivity in athletes with concussion and controls, separately. There was a significant effect of cytomegalovirus on axial and radial kurtosis in athletes with concussion but not controls. Cytomegalovirus positive athletes with concussion showed greater axial (P = 0.007, d = 0.44) and radial (P = 0.010, d = 0.41) kurtosis than cytomegalovirus negative athletes with concussion. Similarly, there was a significant association of cytomegalovirus with cortical thickness in athletes with concussion but not controls. Cytomegalovirus positive athletes with concussion had reduced mean cortical thickness of the right hemisphere (P = 0.009, d = 0.42) compared with cytomegalovirus negative athletes with concussion and showed a similar trend for the left hemisphere (P = 0.036, d = 0.33). There was no significant effect of cytomegalovirus on kurtosis fractional anisotropy, surface area, symptoms and C-reactive protein. The results raise the possibility that cytomegalovirus infection contributes to structural brain abnormalities in the aftermath of concussion perhaps via an amplification of concussion-associated neuroinflammation. More work is needed to identify the biological pathways underlying this process and to clarify the clinical relevance of this putative viral effect.


Assuntos
Traumatismos em Atletas , Concussão Encefálica , Humanos , Citomegalovirus , Estudos Prospectivos , Traumatismos em Atletas/complicações , Traumatismos em Atletas/diagnóstico por imagem , Proteína C-Reativa , Doenças Neuroinflamatórias , Concussão Encefálica/diagnóstico , Encéfalo/patologia , Atletas
18.
Physiol Meas ; 44(5)2023 05 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37080236

RESUMO

Objective.Commercial and research-grade wearable devices have become increasingly popular over the past decade. Information extracted from devices using accelerometers is frequently summarized as 'number of steps' (commercial devices) or 'activity counts' (research-grade devices). Raw accelerometry data that can be easily extracted from accelerometers used in research, for instance ActiGraph GT3X+, are frequently discarded.Approach.Our primary goal is proposing an innovative use of thede-shape synchrosqueezing transformto analyze the raw accelerometry data recorded from a single sensor installed in different body locations, particularly the wrist, to extractgait cadencewhen a subject is walking. The proposed methodology is tested on data collected in a semi-controlled experiment with 32 participants walking on a one-kilometer predefined course. Walking was executed on a flat surface as well as on the stairs (up and down).Main results.The cadences of walking on a flat surface, ascending stairs, and descending stairs, determined from the wrist sensor, are 1.98 ± 0.15 Hz, 1.99 ± 0.26 Hz, and 2.03 ± 0.26 Hz respectively. The cadences are 1.98 ± 0.14 Hz, 1.97 ± 0.25 Hz, and 2.02 ± 0.23 Hz, respectively if determined from the hip sensor, 1.98 ± 0.14 Hz, 1.93 ± 0.22 Hz and 2.06 ± 0.24 Hz, respectively if determined from the left ankle sensor, and 1.98 ± 0.14 Hz, 1.97 ± 0.22 Hz, and 2.04 ± 0.24 Hz, respectively if determined from the right ankle sensor. The difference is statistically significant indicating that the cadence is fastest while descending stairs and slowest when ascending stairs. Also, the standard deviation when the sensor is on the wrist is larger. These findings are in line with our expectations.Conclusion.We show that our proposed algorithm can extract the cadence with high accuracy, even when the sensor is placed on the wrist.


Assuntos
Marcha , Caminhada , Humanos , Acelerometria , Punho , Algoritmos
19.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jan 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36711974

RESUMO

Nonlinear registration plays a central role in most neuroimage analysis methods and pipelines, such as in tractography-based individual and group-level analysis methods. However, nonlinear registration is a non-trivial task, especially when dealing with tractography data that digitally represent the underlying anatomy of the brain's white matter. Furthermore, such process often changes the structure of the data, causing artifacts that can suppress the underlying anatomical and structural details. In this paper, we introduce BundleWarp, a novel and robust streamline-based nonlinear registration method for the registration of white matter tracts. BundleWarp intelligently warps two bundles while preserving the bundles' crucial topological features. BundleWarp has two main steps. The first step involves the solution of an assignment problem that matches corresponding streamlines from the two bundles (iterLAP step). The second step introduces streamline-specific point-based deformations while keeping the topology of the bundle intact (mlCPD step). We provide comparisons against streamline-based linear registration and image-based nonlinear registration methods. BundleWarp quantitatively and qualitatively outperforms both, and we show that BundleWarp can deform and, at the same time, preserve important characteristics of the original anatomical shape of the bundles. Results are shown on 1,728 pairs of bundle registrations across 27 different bundle types. In addition, we present an application of BundleWarp for quantifying bundle shape differences using the generated deformation fields.

20.
J Sport Health Sci ; 12(3): 379-387, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36403906

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Current protein biomarkers are only moderately predictive at identifying individuals with mild traumatic brain injury or concussion. Therefore, more accurate diagnostic markers are needed for sport-related concussion. METHODS: This was a multicenter, prospective, case-control study of athletes who provided blood samples and were diagnosed with a concussion or were a matched non-concussed control within the National Collegiate Athletic Association-Department of Defense Concussion Assessment, Research, and Education Consortium conducted between 2015 and 2019. The blood was collected within 48 h of injury to identify protein abnormalities at the acute and subacute timepoints. Athletes with concussion were divided into 6 h post-injury (0-6 h post-injury) and after 6 h post-injury (7-48 h post-injury) groups. We applied a highly multiplexed proteomic technique that used a DNA aptamers assay to target 1305 proteins in plasma samples from athletes with and without sport-related concussion. RESULTS: A total of 140 athletes with concussion (79.3% males; aged 18.71 ± 1.10 years, mean ± SD) and 21 non-concussed athletes (76.2% males; 19.14 ± 1.10 years) were included in this study. We identified 338 plasma proteins that significantly differed in abundance (319 upregulated and 19 downregulated) in concussed athletes compared to non-concussed athletes. The top 20 most differentially abundant proteins discriminated concussed athletes from non-concussed athletes with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.954 (95% confidence interval: 0.922‒0.986). Specifically, after 6 h of injury, the individual AUC of plasma erythrocyte membrane protein band 4.1 (EPB41) and alpha-synuclein (SNCA) were 0.956 and 0.875, respectively. The combination of EPB41 and SNCA provided the best AUC (1.000), which suggests this combination of candidate plasma biomarkers is the best for diagnosing concussion in athletes after 6 h of injury. CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that proteomic profiling may provide novel diagnostic protein markers and that a combination of EPB41 and SNCA is the most predictive biomarker of concussion after 6 h of injury.


Assuntos
Traumatismos em Atletas , Concussão Encefálica , Esportes , Masculino , Humanos , Feminino , Concussão Encefálica/diagnóstico , Traumatismos em Atletas/diagnóstico , Estudos Prospectivos , alfa-Sinucleína , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Proteômica , Biomarcadores
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