Autonomous wearable sweat rate monitoring based on digitized microbubble detection.

Lab Chip

Interconnected & Integrated Bioelectronics Lab (I2BL), Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, UCLA, USA.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Advancements in wearable bioanalytical microsystems now allow continuous monitoring of physiological indicators through sweat analysis.
  • Accurate interpretation of these readings requires tracking sweat secretion rates to assess hydration and electrolyte balance.
  • A new microbubble detection system, combining microfluidics and electronics, has been developed to improve sweat rate sensing, validated in human trials for effective monitoring during exercise.

Article Abstract

Advancements in wearable bioanalytical microsystems have enabled diurnal and (semi)continuous monitoring of physiologically-relevant indices that are accessible through probing sweat. To deliver an undistorted and physiologically-meaningful interpretation of these readings, tracking the sweat secretion rate is essential, because it allows for calibrating the biomarker readings against variations in sweat secretion and inferring the body's hydration/electrolyte homeostasis status. To realize an autonomous wearable solution with intrinsically high signal-to-noise ratio sweat rate sensing capabilities, here, we devise a digitized microbubble detection mechanism-delivered by a hybrid microfluidic/electronic system with a compact footprint. This mechanism is based on the intermittent generation of microliter-scale bubbles electrolysis and the instantaneous measurement of their time-of-flight (and thus, velocity) impedimetric sensing. In this way, we overcome the limitations of previously proposed sweat rate sensing modalities that are inherently susceptible to non-targeted secretion characteristics (pH, conductivity, and temperature), constrained by volume, or lack system integration for autonomous on-body operation. By deploying our solution in human subject trials, we validate the utility of our solution for seamless monitoring of exercise- and iontophoretically-induced sweat secretion profiles.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9757655PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2lc00670gDOI Listing

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