Publications by authors named "Joana F Pinto"

Objective: This work explores Hall effect sensing paired with a permanent magnet, in the context of pulmonary rehabilitation exercise training.

Methods: Experimental evaluation was performed considering as reference the gold-standard of respiratory monitoring, an airflow transducer, and performance was compared to another wearable device with analogous usability - a piezoelectric sensor. A total of 16 healthy participants performed 15 activities, representative of pulmonary rehabilitation exercises, simultaneously using all devices.

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Musculoskeletal conditions affect millions of people globally; however, conventional treatments pose challenges concerning price, accessibility, and convenience. Many telerehabilitation solutions offer an engaging alternative but rely on complex hardware for body tracking. This work explores the feasibility of a model for 3D Human Pose Estimation (HPE) from monocular 2D videos (MediaPipe Pose) in a physiotherapy context, by comparing its performance to ground truth measurements.

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Rehabilitation treatments have been greatly en-hanced by health-enabling technologies, as these enable more objective and interactive interventions. Multiple studiesindi-cate that gamification is efficient in promoting treatment cus-tomization, adherence, motivation, and engagement, leading to increased patient satisfaction. In this work we study the effectiveness of a novel gamified telerehabilitation system.

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Eccrine porocarcinoma is a rare skin adnexal malignant neoplasm that may arise from a pre-existing benign eccrine poroma or without a predisposing factor. It is a highly invasive neoplasm and has a strong metastatic potential. The most frequently affected organs are the lymph nodes and rarely solid organs such as the liver, lungs and breast.

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Septic arthritis is an unusual manifestation in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The sternoclavicular joint is rarely affected, although it should be considered in immunosuppressed patients and users of intravenous drugs. is the most common pathogen detected and should be covered by empiric antibiotic therapy.

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