Reliability of Gait Analysis Using ORPHE ANALYTICS in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: A Single-center Observational Study
Takaaki Matsuda, Yoshinori Osaki, Hirofumi Takahashi, Erika Matsuda, Yasuhiro Suzuki, Kosuke Kojo, Yuki Murayama, Yoko Sugano, Hitoshi Iwasaki, Bryan J. Mathis, Hiroaki Suzuki, Motohiro Sekiya, Hitoshi Shimano

TL;DR
This study evaluates the reliability of a motion sensor system for gait analysis in type 2 diabetes patients under different conditions.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the reliability of ORPHE ANALYTICS for gait analysis in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Findings
ORPHE ANALYTICS showed excellent intra-rater reliability for most gait parameters.
Inter-rater reliability was good to moderate but had notable random errors in specific gait metrics.
Lateral and medial sway and foot angle showed high random errors under varying conditions.
Abstract
People with diabetes tend to show abnormalities in gait parameters, including walking speed and stride length, relative to those without diabetes. While inertial measurement units (IMUs) provide a portable alternative to optical motion capture systems, the reliability of gait analysis is influenced by factors such as walking distance, timing, and examiner differences. However, the impact of these parameters on gait analysis in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the reliability of ORPHE ANALYTICS, an IMU-based gait analysis system, under varying measurement conditions in patients with T2D. We conducted a single-center observational study (n = 9) to clarify the reliability of ORPHE ANALYTICS, a gait analysis motion sensor system developed by ORPHE Inc., which evaluates more than 15 gait parameters, in patients with T2D. The relative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetic Foot Ulcer Assessment and Management
