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Using wearable technology data to explain recreational running injury: A prospective longitudinal feasibility study

Bradley Stephen Neal, Christopher Bramah, Molly McCarthy‐Ryan, Isabel S. Moore, Christopher Napier, Max R. Paquette, Allison H. Gruber

2023Physical Therapy in Sport10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Investigate 1) if collecting and analysing wristwatch inertial measurement unit (IMU) and global positioning system (GPS) data using a commercially-available training platform was feasible in recreational runners and 2) which variables were associated with subsequent injury. DESIGN: Prospective longitudinal cohort. PARTICIPANTS: Healthy recreational runners. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: We set a priori feasibility thresholds for recruitment (maximum six-months), acceptance (minimum 80%), adherence (minimum 70%), and data collection (minimum 80%). Participants completed three patient-reported outcome measures (PROMS) detailing their psychological health, sleep quality, and intrinsic motivation to run. We extracted baseline anthropometric, biomechanical, metabolic, and training load data from their IMU/GPS wristwatch for analysis. Participants completed a weekly injury status surveillance questionnaire over the next 12-weeks. Feasibility outcomes were analysed descriptively and injured versus non-injured group differences with 95% confidence intervals were calculated for PROM/IMU/GPS data. RESULTS: 149 participants consented; 86 participants completed (55 men, 31 women); 21 developed an injury (0.46 injuries/1000km). Feasibility outcomes were satisfied (recruitment = 47 days; acceptance = 133/149 [89%]; adherence = 93/133 [70%]; data collection = 86/93 [92%]). Acute load by calculated effort was associated with subsequent injury (mean difference -562.14, 95% CI -1019.42, -21.53). CONCLUSION: Collecting and analysing wristwatch IMU/GPS data using a commercially-available training platform was feasible in recreational runners.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePhysical therapyInertial measurement unitData collectionGlobal Positioning SystemPhysical medicine and rehabilitationProspective cohort studyAnthropometryComputer scienceStatisticsSurgeryTelecommunicationsInternal medicineComputer visionMathematicsLower Extremity Biomechanics and PathologiesInjury Epidemiology and PreventionOccupational Health and Performance
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