Parkinetics: Better Monitoring of Parkinson’s Disease Patients at Home

Program:

Biomedical Engineering

Project Description:

Parkinson Disease (PD) is an incurable neurodegenerative disorder characterized by severe motor symptoms that affects approximately one million Americans. Medication is available to mitigate these symptoms but must be readjusted frequently as patient responsiveness wanes over time. However, neurologists have limited scope of information to determine the optimal dosing scheme for their patients, given their dependence on unreliable and incomplete self-reported symptoms. This can result in underprescription, leading to the return of debilitating symptoms, or overprescription, causing adverse drug effects. Thus, neurologists need an objective way to monitor at-home mobility of PD patients in order to precisely adjust medication. We propose a novel sensor system to monitor the motor symptoms of PD patients as they engage in activities of daily living (ADLs). Analysis of longitudinal symptom progression will be presented to clinicians on a dashboard to aid in the informed adjustment of medication, improving quality of life.

Team Members

  • Viggy Vanchinathan (Team Leader)

  • Jaya Hamkins

  • Nana Osei-Owusu

  • Matthew Farah

  • Ramya Palani

  • Roma Desai

  • Arihant Singh

  • Chloe Zhang

Project Mentors, Sponsors, and Partners

Course Faculty

Project Links

Additional Project Information

Project Photo

Project Photo Caption:

The Parkinetics icon has images of a hand holding a brush, a spoon, a comb, and a pen – all tools used during tracked activities-of-daily-living. Connecting the hands grasping the tools is a curv, representing an acceleration time-series. This showcases the acceleration data our project relies on to extract motion information.

Project Video