Research Study Abstract

Clinimetric Review of Motion Sensors in Children and Adolescents

  • Published on November 2006

Background and Objectives
To review the clinimetric quality of motion sensors used to assess physical activity in healthy children and adolescents (2-18 years).

Methods
A systematic literature search was performed in PubMed, Embase, and SpycINFO. The clinimetric quality of two pedometers (Digi-Walker3 Pedoboy), four one-dimensional accelerometers (LSI, Caltrac, Actiwatch, CSA/ActiGraph), and three three-dimensional accelerometers (Tritrac-R3D, RT3, Tracmor2) was evaluated and compared using a 20-item checklist.

Results
Overall, the quality of the studies (n = 35), and therefore the level of evidence for the reproducibility, validity, and feasibility of the motion sensors was modest (mean = 6.4 ± 1.6 out of 14 points). There was strong evidence for a good reproducibility of the Caltrac in adolescents (12—18 years), a poor reproducibility of the Digi-Walker in children (8—12 years), a good validity of the CSA/ActiGraph in children and adolescents (8—18 years), and a good validity of the Tritrac-R3D in children (8—12 years).

Conclusions
The CSA/ActiGraph and the Caltrac are the only motion sensors in which the reproducibility, validity, and feasibility have been examined in different age groups. Further studies of the reproducibility of motion sensors in preschool children, improvement of the quality of clinimetric studies, and evaluation of the acceptability of motion sensors are warranted.

Link to Abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16765269

Author(s)

  • Sanne I. de Vries
  • Ingrid Bakker
  • Marijke Hopman-Rock
  • Remy A. HirasingWillem van Mechelen

Institution(s)

  • TNO Quality of Life, Department of Physical Activity and Health, The Netherlands

  • Body@ Work, Research Centre Physical Activity, Work and Health, TNO-VU University Medical Centre

  • Institute for Research in Extramural Medicine, Department of Social Medicine, VU University Medical Centre


Journal

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology


Categories

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