Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2080/5812
Title: Development of a Multi-Modal Cervical Spine Motion Analysis System for Cervical Spondylosis Assessment
Authors: Humaney, Sunward
Avvari, Ravi Kant
Keywords: Cervical spondylosis
IMỤ
Sensor Fusion
Inverse Dynamics
Musculoskeletal Modelling
Finite Element
Cervical Range of Motion
Stress -Strain Indices
Issue Date: Nov-2025
Citation: International Conference On Advanced Biomaterials for Tissue Engineering and Medical Devices (ICABTEMD), NIT, Rourkela, 28-30 November 2025
Abstract: Cervical spondylosis is typically assessed with global range-of-motion tests that miss level-specific dysfunction and do not quantify mechanical loading on the cervical spine. This project proposes a portable system with three inertial sensors at the forehead, C1, and C7 to capture segment-level kinematics during standardized movements and daily-task postures. Filtered orientation signals are resampled and segmented into clean trials, then converted to relative angles for upper (Head-C1) and lower (C1-C7) cervical segments, following established IMU protocols for cervical motion assessment and coupling analysis. A subject-scaled multibody inverse-dynamics model computes joint torques and axial loads from angular accelerations and gravity terms using anthropometric parameters; this bridges IMU kinematics with musculoskeletal kinetics that have been validated for spine applications. Moments and axial loads are mapped to bending and compressive stress/strain indices using level-specific geometry and finite-element-informed parameters, yielding normalized, clinician-readable risk bands. The device reports segmental ROM, asymmetry, coupling patterns, and load indices, and aggregates them into a severity score to classify normal, mild, moderate, or severe impairment. Prior work supports the validity of IMUs for cervical ROM and the feasibility of combining IMUs with musculoskeletal modeling to estimate spine kinetics, providing a foundation for the proposed diagnostic workflow. This level-aware, load-aware approach aims to improve bedside screening, targeted rehabilitation planning, and longitudinal monitoring in cervical spondylosis.
Description: Copyright belongs to the proceeding publisher.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2080/5812
Appears in Collections:Conference Papers

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