A Comparative Study of Physiological Monitoring with a Wearable Opto-Electronic Patch Sensor (OEPS) for Motion Reduction.

Biosensors (Basel)

School of Electronic, Electrical and Systems Engineering, Loughborough University, Ashby Road, Loughborough, Leicestershire LE11 3TU, UK.

Published: June 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • This paper compares a new wearable opto-electronic patch sensor (OEPS) with commercial devices for monitoring physiological parameters like heart rate and oxygen saturation.
  • The study involved 16 healthy participants and focused on reducing motion artifacts using a three-axis accelerometer, leading to strong agreement in heart rate measurements between OEPS and commercial sensors.
  • Results showed a high correlation (0.97) between the two devices, indicating OEPS's potential for effective physiological monitoring during physical activities.

Article Abstract

This paper presents a comparative study in physiological monitoring between a wearable opto-electronic patch sensor (OEPS) comprising a three-axis Microelectromechanical systems (MEMs) accelerometer (3MA) and commercial devices. The study aims to effectively capture critical physiological parameters, for instance, oxygen saturation, heart rate, respiration rate and heart rate variability, as extracted from the pulsatile waveforms captured by OEPS against motion artefacts when using the commercial probe. The protocol involved 16 healthy subjects and was designed to test the features of OEPS, with emphasis on the effective reduction of motion artefacts through the utilization of a 3MA as a movement reference. The results show significant agreement between the heart rates from the reference measurements and the recovered signals. Significance of standard deviation and error of mean yield values of 2.27 and 0.65 beats per minute, respectively; and a high correlation (0.97) between the results of the commercial sensor and OEPS. T, Wilcoxon and Bland-Altman with 95% limit of agreement tests were also applied in the comparison of heart rates extracted from these sensors, yielding a mean difference (MD: 0.08). The outcome of the present work incites the prospects of OEPS on physiological monitoring during physical activities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4493550PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bios5020288DOI Listing

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