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Differential cardiopulmonary monitoring system for artifact-canceled physiological tracking of athletes, workers, and COVID-19 patients.

Authors :
Lee, Jong
Lee, Jong
Lee, KunHyuck
Kang, Youn
Kim, Jin-Tae
Avila, Raudel
Tzavelis, Andreas
Kim, Joohee
Ryu, Hanjun
Kwak, Sung
Kim, Jong
Banks, Aaron
Jang, Hokyung
Chang, Jan-Kai
Li, Shupeng
Mummidisetty, Chaithanya
Park, Yoonseok
Nappi, Simone
Chun, Keum
Lee, Young
Kwon, Kyeongha
Ni, Xiaoyue
Chung, Ha
Luan, Haiwen
Kim, Jae-Hwan
Wu, Changsheng
Xu, Shuai
Banks, Anthony
Jayaraman, Arun
Huang, Yonggang
Rogers, John
Jeong, Hyoyoung
Lee, Jong
Lee, Jong
Lee, KunHyuck
Kang, Youn
Kim, Jin-Tae
Avila, Raudel
Tzavelis, Andreas
Kim, Joohee
Ryu, Hanjun
Kwak, Sung
Kim, Jong
Banks, Aaron
Jang, Hokyung
Chang, Jan-Kai
Li, Shupeng
Mummidisetty, Chaithanya
Park, Yoonseok
Nappi, Simone
Chun, Keum
Lee, Young
Kwon, Kyeongha
Ni, Xiaoyue
Chung, Ha
Luan, Haiwen
Kim, Jae-Hwan
Wu, Changsheng
Xu, Shuai
Banks, Anthony
Jayaraman, Arun
Huang, Yonggang
Rogers, John
Jeong, Hyoyoung
Source :
Science Advances; vol 7, iss 20
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Soft, skin-integrated electronic sensors can provide continuous measurements of diverse physiological parameters, with broad relevance to the future of human health care. Motion artifacts can, however, corrupt the recorded signals, particularly those associated with mechanical signatures of cardiopulmonary processes. Design strategies introduced here address this limitation through differential operation of a matched, time-synchronized pair of high-bandwidth accelerometers located on parts of the anatomy that exhibit strong spatial gradients in motion characteristics. When mounted at a location that spans the suprasternal notch and the sternal manubrium, these dual-sensing devices allow measurements of heart rate and sounds, respiratory activities, body temperature, body orientation, and activity level, along with swallowing, coughing, talking, and related processes, without sensitivity to ambient conditions during routine daily activities, vigorous exercises, intense manual labor, and even swimming. Deployments on patients with COVID-19 allow clinical-grade ambulatory monitoring of the key symptoms of the disease even during rehabilitation protocols.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science Advances; vol 7, iss 20
Notes :
application/pdf, Science Advances vol 7, iss 20
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1401038546
Document Type :
Electronic Resource