ASNR Annual Conference

 In Health, Conferences, Rehabilitation, Neuroscience
APDM in Attendance at the American Society of Neurorehabilitation Annual Conference
San Diego, California
Nov 1-2
Booth # 06

 

APDM Wearable Technologies is dedicated to advancing clinical research by quantifying human movement with wearable sensors. APDM is focused on discovering outcome measures that have clinical significance in the effectiveness of neurorehabilitation. Deployed by thousands of researchers and clinicians worldwide, our proprietary Opal wearable sensors and sophisticated algorithms streamline data collection for tracking rehabilitation progress and assessing intervention response. APDM’s solutions can be used to track movement data in populations recovering from a stroke or a CNS injury and can help determine the impact of neuromodulation in individuals with movement disorders such as ataxia or cerebral palsy.

APDM offers three different solutions utilizing the Opal sensor technology designed to meet the individualized needs of our customers:

  1. Moveo Explorer produces full-body kinematic data, including joint angles and range of motion during functional tasks.
  2. Mobility Lab generates spatiotemporal outcome measures of gait and balance (our most commonly used system for clinical trials).
  3. Motion Studio provides access to synchronized raw inertial data.

The mission of the American Society of Neurorehabilitation (ASNR) is to promote the medical and social wellbeing of persons with disabling neurological disorders, to advance training and research in the basic and clinical sciences that can lead to functional recovery of neurologically impaired persons, and to disseminate the knowledge of this research among professionals and the general public.

APDM’s Stephanie Hertzog will be providing live demonstrations of Moveo Explorer, our portable motion capture lab, and Mobility Lab, our portable gait lab.

 



CITED IN

2018, Iosa, et al. Usefulness of Magnetoinertial Wearable Devices in Neurorehabilitation of Children with Cerebral Palsy.” Applied Bionics and Biomechanics.
2018, Lizama, et al.
A Novel Neuromodulation Technique for the Rehabilitation of Balance and Gait: A Case Study.“Journal of Clinical Neuroscience.
2018, Anidi, et al. Neuromodulation Targets Pathological not Physiological Beta Bursts during Gait in Parkinson’s Disease.” Neurobiology of Disease.
2018, Gera, et al. Inertial Sensor-Based Assessment of Central Sensory Integration for Balance After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.” Military Medicine.
2018, Duclos, et al. Using Inertial Signals to Characterize Main Lower Limb Gait Patterns in Individuals Post-stroke.” Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine.
2018, Watson, et al.The Influence of Activity-dependent Stimulation on Gait Re-training in Chronic Stroke Survivors.” Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine.

Visit www.apdm.com/publications for additional citations.

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