Literature DB >> 30855133

Wireless Wearable Ultrasound Sensor on a Paper Substrate to Characterize Respiratory Behavior.

Ang Chen1, Andrew Joshua Halton1, Rachel Diane Rhoades1, Jayden Charles Booth1, Xinhao Shi2, Xiangli Bu2, Ning Wu2, Junseok Chae1.   

Abstract

Respiratory behavior contains crucial parameters to feature lung functionality, including respiratory rate, profile, and volume. The current well-adopted method to characterize respiratory behavior is spirometry using a spirometer, which is bulky, heavy, expensive, requires a trained provider to operate, and is incapable of continuous monitoring of respiratory behavior, which is often critical to assess chronic respiratory diseases. This work presents a wireless wearable sensor on a paper substrate that is capable of continuous monitoring of respiratory behavior and delivering the clinically relevant respiratory information to a smartphone. The wireless wearable sensor was attached on the midway of the xiphoid process and the costal margin, corresponding to the abdomen-apposed rib cage, based on the anatomical and experimental analysis. The sensor, with a footprint of 40 × 35 × 6 mm3 and weighing 6.5 g, including a 2.7 g battery, consists of three subsystems, (i) ultrasound emitter, (ii) ultrasound receiver, and (iii) data acquisition and wireless transmitter. The sensor converts the linear strain at the wearing site to the lung volume change by measuring the change in ultrasound pressure as a function of the distance between the emitter and the receiver. The temporal lung volume change data, directly converted from the ultrasound pressure, is wirelessly transmitted to a smartphone where a custom-designed app computes to show volume-time and flow rate-volume loop graphs, standard respiratory analysis plots. The app analyzes the plots to show the clinically relevant respiratory behavioral parameters, such as forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume delivered in the first second (FEV1). Potential user-induced error on sensor placement and temperature sensitivity were studied to demonstrate the sensor maintains its performance within a reasonable range of those variables. Eight volunteers were recruited to evaluate the sensor, which showed the mean deviation of the FEV1/FVC ratio in the range of 0.00-4.25% when benchmarked by the spirometer. The continuous measurement of respiratory behavioral parameters helps track the progression of the respiratory diseases, including asthma progression to provide alerts to relevant caregivers to seek needed timely treatment.

Entities:  

Keywords:  asthma control; paper substrate; ultrasound; wearable; wireless

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30855133     DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.9b00043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Sens        ISSN: 2379-3694            Impact factor:   7.711


  2 in total

1.  Wireless Wearable Ultrasound Sensor to Characterize Respiratory Behavior.

Authors:  Ang Chen; Rachel Diane Rhoades; Andrew Joshua Halton; Jayden Charles Booth; Xinhao Shi; Xiangli Bu; Ning Wu; Junseok Chae
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

Review 2.  Wearable Sensors for Remote Health Monitoring: Potential Applications for Early Diagnosis of Covid-19.

Authors:  Sheyda Mirjalali; Shuhua Peng; Zhijian Fang; Chun-Hui Wang; Shuying Wu
Journal:  Adv Mater Technol       Date:  2021-09-03
  2 in total

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