| Literature DB >> 30177793 |
Anand Chandrasekhar1, Keerthana Natarajan1, Mohammad Yavarimanesh1, Ramakrishna Mukkamala2.
Abstract
We developed an iPhone X application to measure blood pressure (BP) via the "oscillometric finger pressing method". The user presses her fingertip on both the front camera and screen to increase the external pressure of the underlying artery, while the application measures the resulting variable-amplitude blood volume oscillations via the camera and applied pressure via the strain gauge array under the screen. The application also visually guides the fingertip placement and actuation and then computes BP from the measurements just like many automatic cuff devices. We tested the application, along with a finger cuff device, against a standard cuff device. The application yielded bias and precision errors of -4.0 and 11.4 mmHg for systolic BP and -9.4 and 9.7 mmHg for diastolic BP (n = 18). These errors were near the finger cuff device errors. This proof-of-concept study surprisingly indicates that cuff-less and calibration-free BP monitoring may be feasible with many existing and forthcoming smartphones.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30177793 PMCID: PMC6120863 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-31632-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1An iPhone application for cuff-less and calibration-free blood pressure (BP) monitoring via extension of the oscillometric cuff measurement principle. (a) Photograph of an oscillometric cuff device and diagram of BP computation from the measured cuff pressure and blood volume oscillations. Reproduced from ref.[6]. (b) Photograph of an iPhone X application to implement the “oscillometric finger pressing method” by measuring finger pressure via the strain gauge array under the screen and finger blood volume oscillations via the front camera. Insert redrawn from ref.[7]. (c) Photograph of a user initializing the application by measuring fingertip width and height from the top of the fingertip to the artery near the middle of the fingertip. (d) Photograph of the user making a measurement by placing the fingertip within a rectangular box of the measured width and height; holding the phone horizontally at heart level while resting the fingertip flat on the phone; and pressing to increase the pressure within the two target blue lines.
Figure 2Application accuracy results (n = 18 users). Correlation and Bland-Altman plots comparing the brachial BP measurements from the (a–d) iPhone application and (e–h) a finger cuff device to the brachial BP measurements from a standard arm cuff device. The closed circles are data from new users holding the finger devices at heart level, and the open circles are data from experienced users holding the finger devices below the heart to increase BP. r, correlation coefficient; μ, mean of errors (bias error); σ, standard deviation of errors (precision error).