Your competent? doctor should have had objective gait monitoring years ago. Without that objective damage diagnosis your doctor is flying blind in prescribing EXACT STROKE REHAB PROTOCOLS!
Sensors and wearables have been out for years and obviously NOTHING HAS BEEN DONE.
motion sensors (13 posts)
motion-capture sensors (1 post
motion tracking (2 posts)
inertial sensors (7 posts)
sensors (7 posts)
wearable arms (1 post)
wearable (17 posts)
wearable computing (3 posts)
wearable devices (34 posts)
wearable electronic device (1 post)
Wearable inertial measurement units (1 post)
wearable sensors (16 posts)
wearable shoe (1 post)
The latest here:
Remote Gait Monitoring Using Wearable Devices in Stroke Rehabilitation
James Richardson
Emily Carter
Daniel Thompson
Sarah Mitchell
Abstract
Stroke remains one of the leading causes of long-term disability worldwide, frequently resulting
in gait impairments that significantly affect mobility, independence, and quality of life.
Traditional stroke rehabilitation relies heavily on in-clinic assessments that are limited in
frequency, context, and ecological validity. Recent advances in wearable sensing technologies
have enabled continuous, remote gait monitoring, offering new opportunities to enhance stroke
rehabilitation through data-driven personalization and real-time feedback. This research
examines the role of wearable devices in remote gait monitoring for stroke rehabilitation,
focusing on system architectures, sensor modalities, data analytics, clinical integration, and
patient outcomes. The study explores how wearable-based gait monitoring supports longitudinal
assessment, early detection of functional decline, adaptive therapy planning, and patient
engagement beyond clinical settings. Findings suggest that remote gait monitoring improves
rehabilitation continuity, enhances clinical decision-making, and enables scalable care models,
while also presenting challenges related to data quality, patient adherence, privacy, and clinical
validation. The paper concludes by outlining future directions for integrating wearable gait
monitoring into intelligent, patient-centered stroke rehabilitation ecosystems.
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