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
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.