In schizophrenia, objective measurement can enhance patient care and aid research into how various sign groups reflect different aspects of psychiatric illness.
Smartphone sensing technology has the potential to establish standardized assessments for evaluating Negative Symptom Syndrome (NSS) in schizophrenia, states article published in Harvard Review of Psychiatry (HRP), part of the Lippincott portfolio from Wolters Kluwer, John Torous, MD, MBI and colleagues of Harvard's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the Massachusetts Mental Health Center in Boston (1✔ ✔Trusted Source
Potential Role of Smartphone Technology in Advancing Work on Neurological Soft Signs with a Focus on Schizophrenia
Go to source). Since the 1980s, it's been known that neurological soft signs (NSS) can distinguish schizophrenia from healthy individuals. NSS are subtle neurological impairments, mainly affecting sensory integration, balance, rapid movements, and orientation. Identifying them can improve diagnosis and treatment, yet assessing them has been hindered for over 40 years due to subjectivity in rating systems, making measurement and comparison challenging.
Pioneering Digital Phenotyping in Schizophrenia Diagnosis
In 2016, Dr. Torous and his colleagues were the first to define "digital phenotyping," the use of data from smart devices to identify behavior patterns that can detect disease. In the case of NSS, physicians can collect information from a smartphone's motion sensors, like those that adjust the screen display from portrait to landscape and react to gaming-related gestures, to detect behavior patterns as possible NSS markers. For example:- A test of balance: Patients stand with their arms held parallel to the floor and their eyes closed for one minute; patients could perform the same test with a smartphone attached to their sternums.
- A test of motor coordination (like the tandem walk): Patients walk heel-to-toe in a straight line for 12 feet; the same test has been administered to patients with Parkinsons disease by having them put a smartphone in their pants pockets.
- A test of complex motor acts: Ask the patient to reproduce a series of audible taps; alternatively, the smartphone could play a beat with the patient tapping along, and the patient could be asked to continue tapping the same pattern after the beat stops.
‘Smartphones and digital phenotyping offer numerous benefits compared to traditional methods for assessing schizophrenia. #schizophrenia #schizophreniadiagnosis’
"Incorporating digital phenotyping into NSS assessment offers the potential to make measurement more scalable, accessible, and directly comparable across locations, cultures, and demographics," Dr. Torous and his colleagues note. Some tests may require use of a camera, but with proper security and privacy features in place the data could be safely employed. "The rapid adoption of telehealth measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic increased patient buy-in and enhanced privacy considerations, making it an advantageous time to introduce smartphone sensing technology and tools to measure NSS," the authors conclude.
Reference:
- Potential Role of Smartphone Technology in Advancing Work on Neurological Soft Signs with a Focus on Schizophrenia - (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37699066/)
Source-Eurekalert