1. Transfer function for vital infrasound pressures between the carotid artery and the tympanic membrane
- Author
-
Masato Yamashita and Kenji Furihata
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Tympanic Membrane ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Stethoscope ,Respiratory rate ,Acoustics ,Posture ,Pulsatile flow ,Models, Biological ,law.invention ,Young Adult ,Respiratory Rate ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Heart Rate ,Risk Factors ,law ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,Transducers, Pressure ,medicine ,Humans ,Arterial Pressure ,Ear canal ,Respiratory system ,Fourier Analysis ,Cardiac cycle ,business.industry ,Stethoscopes ,Discriminant Analysis ,Middle Aged ,Occupational Diseases ,Atmospheric Pressure ,Carotid Arteries ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood pressure ,Cardiology ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,business - Abstract
While occupational injury is associated with numerous individual and work-related risk factors, including long working hours and short sleep duration, the complex mechanisms causing such injuries are not yet fully understood. The relationship between the infrasound pressures of the tympanic membrane [ear canal pressure (ECP)], detected using an earplug embedded with a low-frequency microphone, and the carotid artery [carotid artery pressure (CAP)], detected using a stethoscope fitted with the same microphone, can be quantitatively characterized using systems analysis. The transfer functions of 40 normal workers (19 to 57 years old) were characterized, involving the analysis of 446 data points. The ECP waveform exhibits a pulsatile character with a slow respiratory component, which is superimposed on a biphasic recording that is synchronous with the cardiac cycle. The respiratory ECP waveform correlates with the instantaneous heart rate. The results also revealed that various fatigue-related risk factors may affect the mean magnitudes of the measured pressures and the delay transfer functions between CAP and ECP in the study population; these factors include systolic blood pressure, salivary amylase activity, age, sleep duration, postural changes, chronic fatigue, and pulse rate. [https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4773270], Article, JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA. 133(2):1169-1186 (2013)
- Published
- 2013