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Validity and reliability of Eforto®, a system to (self-)monitor grip strength and muscle fatigability in older persons

Dobbeleer, L. ; Swart, M. ; Geerds, M. ; Baggen, R. ; Jansen, A. ; Tielemans, R. ; Silva, H. ; Lieten, S. ; Barbé, K. ; Peeters, G. ; Vollenbroek-Hutten, M. ; Melis, R. ; Bautmans, I.

Aging clinical and experimental research Vol. 35, Nº 0, pp. 835 - 845, March, 2023.

ISSN (print):
ISSN (online): 1720-8319

Scimago Journal Ranking: 1,01 (in 2023)

Digital Object Identifier: 10.1007/s40520-023-02365-3

Abstract
We developed Eforto®, an innovative system for (self-)monitoring of grip strength (GS) and muscle fatigability (Fatigue Resistance (FR = time until GS decreased to 50% of maximum during sustained contraction) and grip work (GW = area under the strength-time curve)). The Eforto® system consists of a rubber bulb that is wirelessly connected to a smartphone-based application, and a telemonitoring platform. The aim was to evaluate the validity and reliability of Eforto® to measure muscle fatigability. Community-dwelling older persons (n = 61), geriatric inpatients (n = 26) and hip fracture patients (n = 25) were evaluated for GS and muscle fatigability. In community dwellers fatigability was tested twice in the clinic (once with Eforto®, once with Martin Vigorimeter (MV), standard analog handgrip system) and for six consecutive days as a self-assessment at home with Eforto®. In hospitalized participants, fatigability was tested twice using Eforto®, once by a researcher and once by a health professional. Criterion validity was supported by good to excellent correlations between Eforto® and MV for GS (r = 0.95) and muscle fatigability (FR r = 0.81 and GW r = 0.73), and no significant differences in measurements between both systems. Inter-rater and intra-rater reliability for GW were moderate to excellent (intra-class correlation: 0.59–0.94). The standard error of measurement for GW was small for geriatric inpatients and hip fracture patients (224.5 and 386.5 kPa*s) and higher for community-dwellers (661.5 kPa*s). We established the criterion validity and reliability of Eforto® in older community-dwelling persons and hospitalized patients, supporting the implementation of Eforto® for (self-)monitoring of muscle fatigability.