HMN 2025: How Slow turning could be an indicator for Parkinson’s disease

older couple

An international study has found that wearable technology could help detect Parkinson’s disease (PD) up to nine years before clinical diagnosis simply by monitoring how people turn when they walk.

The collaborative research, involving five institutions, including the University Hospital of Kiel and Murdoch University, tracked 1,051 participants over the age of 50 for 10 years. Participants wore a single sensor on their lower back which measured their turning movements, including turning angle, duration, and speed, while walking down a 20 meter hallway.

The ongoing study, being conducted at the University Hospital Tübingen in Germany, with data collected over a decade, found slower peak angular velocity, how quickly someone turns at their fastest point, was linked to a higher risk of developing PD. According to the results, estimated turning speeds started to decline around 8.8 years before a clinical diagnosis of PD, making it one of the earliest detectable motor signs of PD.

To validate the findings, researchers used a machine learning model that considered age, sex, and peak angular velocity to predict which participants would develop PD. The model identified Parkinson’s cases with an area under the curve (AUC) of 80.5%, indicating strong predictive accuracy. The study, titled “Turning Slowly Predicts Future Diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease: A Decade-Long Longitudinal Analysis,” is published in the journal Annals of Neurology.

“This research opens a vital window for early intervention,” said Associate Professor Brook Galna from Murdoch University’s School of Allied Health.

“By detecting changes in turning speed through wearable sensors, in combination with other early signs of Parkinson’s, we can identify individuals at risk long before symptoms become clinically apparent,” he said. “Earlier detection of people at risk of developing Parkinson’s will speed the discovery and testing of neuroprotective treatments designed to slow disease progression and keep people living independently for longer.”

More information

Morad Elshehabi et al, Turning Slowly Predicts Future Diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease: A Decade?Long Longitudinal Analysis, Annals of Neurology (2025). DOI: 10.1002/ana.78034

Journal information:
Annals of Neurology


Key medical concepts

Parkinson’s Disease

Provided by
Murdoch University



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