Parkinson’s Disease

Driving breakthroughs in early Parkinson’s disease measurement & monitoring

The Axis Patch is currently intended for research use only.
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Closing the Gap in Early Detection

Parkinson’s Disease represents a significant measurement challenge in neurology. Despite billions of dollars invested in treatment development, clinical assessments still rely on brief, subjective, clinic-based observations that capture only a snapshot of symptoms.

Subtle gait and motor changes may emerge years before a formal diagnosis, yet once diagnosed, patients are monitored infrequently, leaving motor fluctuations and off-periods largely unmeasured.

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Introducing Grasshopper Health for Parkinson’s

Grasshopper’s Axis Patch™ captures Parkinson’s-specific gait and motor signatures continuously in the home environment, including gait speed, cadence, stride length variability, postural sway, turn dynamics, bradykinesia patterns, gait-freezing precursors and motor fluctuation cycles.  

With sacrum placement enabling measurement of whole-body gait dynamics rather than isolated symptom observation, the Axis PatchTM focuses on the motor domain most predictive of disability and progression.

An Overview of Parkinson’s Disease

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Parkinson’s disease occurs when brain cells that make dopamine, a chemical that coordinates movement, stop working or die. Affected individuals experience tremors, slowness, stiffness and walking and balance problems.

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Other complications include constipation, depression, memory problems and other non-movement symptoms. PD is a lifelong and progressive disease, meaning that symptoms worsen over time.

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The disease affects nearly one million people in the United States and more than six million people worldwide. Men are 1.5 times more likely to have Parkinson's disease than women.

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The Gait Footprint of Parkinson’s Disease

Individuals with Parkinson’s often exhibit:

  • Increased gait variability
  • Reduced stride length
  • Shuffling gait
  • Reduced arm swing
  • Freezing gait
  • Slower walking speed

These patterns can fluctuate throughout the day, making continuous monitoring especially valuable. Earlier awareness of these changes helps physicians see the full picture of motor function in daily life.

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How Continuous Analysis Helps

The Axis Patch™ supports clinicians by providing:

  • Early visibility into gait and motor changes
  • Longitudinal data to support clinical evaluation of disease progression
  • Objective insight to inform care planning and transitions

Experience the Impact

Connect with our team to learn more about what continuous gait analysis can reveal.