| Literature DB >> 25871010 |
Carlo Massaroni1, Paola Saccomandi2, Emiliano Schena3.
Abstract
The growing interest in the development of smart textiles for medical applications is driven by the aim to increase the mobility of patients who need a continuous monitoring of such physiological parameters. At the same time, the use of fiber optic sensors (FOSs) is gaining large acceptance as an alternative to traditional electrical and mechanical sensors for the monitoring of thermal and mechanical parameters. The potential impact of FOSs is related to their good metrological properties, their small size and their flexibility, as well as to their immunity from electromagnetic field. Their main advantage is the possibility to use textile based on fiber optic in a magnetic resonance imaging environment, where standard electronic sensors cannot be employed. This last feature makes FOSs suitable for monitoring biological parameters (e.g., respiratory and heartbeat monitoring) during magnetic resonance procedures. Research interest in combining FOSs and textiles into a single structure to develop wearable sensors is rapidly growing. In this review we provide an overview of the state-of-the-art of textiles, which use FOSs for monitoring of mechanical parameters of physiological interest. In particular we briefly describe the working principle of FOSs employed in this field and their relevant advantages and disadvantages. Also reviewed are their applications for the monitoring of mechanical parameters of physiological interest.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25871010 PMCID: PMC4493508 DOI: 10.3390/jfb6020204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Biomater ISSN: 2079-4983
Figure 1Schematic of the working principle of Fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensors, and its response to strain.
Figure 2(A) Schematic of the working principle of an intensity modulated sensor using two fiber optic; (B) schematic of the working principle of an intensity modulated sensor using a fiber optic and a mirror; (C) schematic of the light lost from the fiber core caused by bending (adapted from [10]).
Figure 3Schematic representation of the monitoring systems proposed by and developed in the optical fiber sensors embedded into technical textile for healthcare (OFSETH) project.
Figure 4(A) Design of the FBG sensor developed in OFSETH project (adapted from [57]); (B) MRI-compatible sensing harness which embeds the fiber optic sensors for respiratory monitoring (adapted from [57]).
Smart textiles and wearable systems based on fiber optic sensors: working principle, medical application and metrological properties.
| Reference | Working Principle | Medical Application | Metrological Properties and Other Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Silica FBGs | Respiratory monitoring during MRI procedures | Non-invasive; MR compatible; good linearity in a wide range of strains with sensitivity = 0.35 nm/%; accuracy better than 0.1% of elongation |
| [ | Silica FBGs | Cardiac and Respiratory monitoring during MRI procedures | Non-invasive; MR compatible; sensitivity of 0.8 nm/µε−1 |
| [ | Silica FBGs | Cardiac and Respiratory monitoring | Non-invasive; Sensitivity of 8 nm/%; good linear trend; thermal sensitivity ≈ 10.7 × 10−3 nm/°C |
| [ | Silica FBGs | Cardiac and Respiratory monitoring during MRI procedures | Non-invasive; MR compatible; Simple design; Good accuracy in terms of breathing rate (±1 bpm) and heartbeat per minute (±3 bpm); relative error in patients during MRI procedures <8% |
| [ | Silica FBGs | Cardiac and Respiratory monitoring during MRI | Non-invasive; Simple design; Flat frequency response in the range of interest (0.5 Hz up to 20 Hz); maximum relative error of 12% |
| [ | Silica FBG | Heart rate monitoring | Non-invasive; MR compatible; Root mean square error lower than 6 beats per minute |
| [ | Silica FBGs | Respiratory function monitoring | Non-invasive; 6% of error on the average volume |
| [ | Bare FBG | Body temperature monitoring | Non-invasive; Sensitivity of 150 pm/°C in the range of interest (from 33 °C to 42 °C); accuracy 0.1 °C |
| [ | Macro-bending/OTDR technique | Respiratory monitoring | Non-invasive; MR compatible; Good sensitivity stability after 172800 cycles (variations < 10%); low cost component for their interrogation |
| [ | Intensity modulated | Respiratory monitoring | Non-invasive; MR compatible; low cost component |
| [ | Intensity modulated | Respiratory monitoring | Non-invasive; low cost component |
| [ | Macrobending hetero-core fiber optic | Respiratory monitoring | Non-invasive; low cost component; good agreement with the breathing rate measured by a commercial device |
| [ | microbending | Respiratory monitoring during MRI procedures | Non-invasive; MR compatible; Accuracy better than ±2 breaths per minute |
| [ | microbending | Respiratory rate and heart rate | Non-invasive; MR compatible; Accuracy better than ±2 breaths or beats per minute for respiratory monitoring heart rate |
| [ | microbending | Heartbeat and respiratory monitoring | Non-invasive; low cost component; good agreement with the heart beat measured by a commercial device |
Figure 5(A) Textiles based on macrobending FOS embedding a standard single mode fiber (adapted from [57]); (B) Macrobending sensors for monitoring of abdominal movements (adapted from [57]); (C) Output of the OTDR sensors during the monitoring of abdominal movement (adapted from [57]).