| Literature DB >> 35040037 |
Nick Hayward1, Mahdi Shaban2, James Badger3, Isobel Jones3,2, Yang Wei2,4, Daniel Spencer2, Stefania Isichei3, Martin Knight3, James Otto3, Gurinder Rayat3, Denny Levett3, Michael Grocott3,5, Harry Akerman3,2, Neil White2.
Abstract
Respiratory rate (RR) is a marker of critical illness, but during hospital care, RR is often inaccurately measured. The capaciflector is a novel sensor that is small, inexpensive, and flexible, thus it has the potential to provide a single-use, real-time RR monitoring device. We evaluated the accuracy of continuous RR measurements by capaciflector hardware both at rest and during exercise. Continuous RR measurements were made with capaciflectors at four chest locations. In healthy subjects (n = 20), RR was compared with strain gauge chest belt recordings during timed breathing and two different body positions at rest. In patients undertaking routine cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET, n = 50), RR was compared with pneumotachometer recordings. Comparative RR measurement bias and limits of agreement were calculated and presented in Bland-Altman plots. The capaciflector was shown to provide continuous RR measurements with a bias less than 1 breath per minute (BPM) across four chest locations. Accuracy and continuity of monitoring were upheld even during vigorous CPET exercise, often with narrower limits of agreement than those reported for comparable technologies. We provide a unique clinical demonstration of the capaciflector as an accurate breathing monitor, which may have the potential to become a simple and affordable medical device.Clinical trial number: NCT03832205 https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03832205 registered February 6th, 2019.Entities:
Keywords: Capaciflector; Critical care; Perioperative medicine; Respiratory monitoring; Respiratory rate; Sensor
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35040037 PMCID: PMC8763619 DOI: 10.1007/s10877-021-00798-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Monit Comput ISSN: 1387-1307 Impact factor: 1.977
Fig. 1The capaciflector as a respiratory rate (RR) sensor. A: Photograph showing one printed capaciflector sensor on fabric, with a 20 pence coin added for scale. B: Diagram showing the structure of the capaciflector that detects changes in capacitance as the thorax moves, providing the sensor signal. C: Example of the sensor signal (capacitance change) for a 60 s measurement time. The blue and yellow shaded regions indicate exhalation and inhalation, respectively. D: Photograph of a healthy volunteer wearing a pneumotachometer mask setup and demonstrating capaciflector placement on the chest during cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), who provided written informed consent for image publication. The ECG dot electrodes are labelled for comparison
Fig. 2Bland–Altman plots presented by capaciflector channel location during the metronome breathing pattern test for healthy subjects (n = 15, 17, 15 and 8 for channels 1–4, respectively). The comparator was a strain gauge chest belt (Study 1). RR, respiratory rate; BPM, breaths per minute
Fig. 3Bland–Altman plots presented by capaciflector channel location while subjects (n = 6, 6, 9 and 6 for channels 1–4, respectively) were lying down. The comparator was a strain gauge chest belt (Study 1). RR, respiratory rate; BPM, breaths per minute
Fig. 4Bland–Altman plots presented by capaciflector channel location while subjects (n = 7, 6, 6 and 4 for channels 1–4, respectively) were seated. The comparator was a strain gauge chest belt (Study 1). RR, respiratory rate; BPM, breaths per minute
Fig. 5Bland–Altman plots presented by capaciflector channel location while subjects (n = 22, 18, 18 and 20 for channels 1–4, respectively) underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) on an exercise bike. The comparator was a pneumotachometer (Study 2). RR, respiratory rate; BPM, breaths per minute
An overview of accuracy investigations of commercially available respiratory rate monitoring technologies
N: Number of subjects, LOA: Limits of agreement, CC: Correlation coefficient (Bland Altman comparison not published), N/A: Not applicable