Title :
Accuracy and reliability testing of a portable soft tissue indentor
Author :
Klaesner, Joseph W. ; Commean, Paul K. ; Hastings, Mary K. ; Zou, Dequan ; Mueller, Michael J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., St. Louis, MO, USA
fDate :
6/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We have designed, built, and tested a portable indentor device that allows us to determine force/displacement (F/D) measurements on soft tissue in a clinical or research setting. The indentor system consists of a load cell mounted on a three-dimensional measurement device (Metrecom). The output of the load cell and the Metrecom are recorded and analyzed by software running on a notebook computer. The displacement calibration of the Metrecom gave an average error=0.005 mm [standard deviation (SD)=0.062)]. The force calibration of the load cell resulted in an average error=0.022 N (SD=0.049) and a linearity of 1.0062(R 2=0.9998). The indentor device was tested on six different human soft tissues by two different investigators. The interreliabilities and intrareliabilities were 0.99 [interclass correlation (ICC)] indicating that the results were repeatable by more than one investigator. F/D measurements from indentor testing on two materials were comparable to values measured using an Instron device (5.34 versus, 5.52 N/mm, and 0.98 versus 1.04 N/mm). The device was used to measure the soft tissue characteristics on the plantar surface of the foot of one subject. These data were used to calculate the effective Young´s modulus for the tissue using equations derived by Zheng et al. [1999] and indicated a wide range of values dependent upon the portion of the F/D curve used. All results indicate data from this portable indentor device are reliable, accurate, and sensitive enough to identify mechanical properties of human tissues.
Keywords :
biological tissues; biomechanics; biomedical measurement; biomedical transducers; calibration; displacement measurement; elastic moduli measurement; force measurement; indentation; orthotics; portable instruments; reliability; Metrecom device; accuracy testing; diabetes; displacement calibration; effective Young´s modulus; foot plantar surface; force calibration; force/displacement measurements; linearity; load cell; orthotics; portable soft tissue indentor; reliability testing; three-dimensional measurement device; tissue mechanical properties; Biological materials; Biological tissues; Calibration; Computer errors; Displacement measurement; Foot; Force measurement; Humans; Linearity; Materials testing; Adult; Connective Tissue; Equipment Design; Female; Foot; Humans; Male; Models, Theoretical; Muscle, Skeletal; Orthotic Devices; Pressure; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity;
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/7333.928583