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1.
Biosens Bioelectron ; 267: 116790, 2024 Sep 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39332253

RESUMO

Continuous monitoring of cardiovascular parameters like pulse wave velocity (PWV), blood pressure wave (BPW), stiffness index (SI), reflection index (RI), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and cardio-ankle vascular index (CAVI) has significant clinical importance for the early diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Standard approaches, including echocardiography, impedance cardiography, or hemodynamic monitoring, are hindered by expensive and bulky apparatus and accessibility only in specialized facilities. Moreover, noninvasive techniques like sphygmomanometry, electrocardiography, and arterial tonometry often lack accuracy due to external electrical interferences, artifacts produced by unreliable electrode contacts, misreading from placement errors, or failure in detecting transient issues and trends. Here, we report a bio-compatible, flexible, noninvasive, low-cost piezoelectric sensor for continuous and real-time cardiovascular monitoring. The sensor, utilizing a thin aluminum nitride film on a flexible Kapton substrate, is used to extract heart rate, blood pressure waves, pulse wave velocities, and cardio-ankle vascular index from four arterial pulse sites: carotid, brachial, radial, and posterior tibial arteries. This simultaneous recording, for the first time in the same experiment, allows to provide a comprehensive cardiovascular patient's health profile. In a test with a 28-year-old male subject, the sensor yielded the SI = 7.1 ± 0.2 m/s, RI = 54.4 ± 0.5 %, MAP = 86.2 ± 1.5 mmHg, CAVI = 7.8 ± 0.2, and seven PWVs from the combination of the four different arterial positions, in good agreement with the typical values reported in the literature. These findings make the proposed technology a powerful tool to facilitate personalized medical diagnosis in preventing CVDs.

2.
Bioengineering (Basel) ; 10(1)2023 Jan 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36671685

RESUMO

Advances in wearable device technology pave the way for wireless health monitoring for medical and non-medical applications. In this work, we present a wearable heart rate monitoring platform communicating in the sub-6GHz 5G ISM band. The proposed device is composed of an Aluminium Nitride (AlN) piezoelectric sensor, a patch antenna, and a custom printed circuit board (PCB) for data acquisition and transmission. The experimental results show that the presented system can acquire heart rate together with diastolic and systolic duration, which are related to heart relaxation and contraction, respectively, from the posterior tibial artery. The overall system dimension is 20 mm by 40 mm, and the total weight is 20 g, making this device suitable for daily utilization. Furthermore, the system allows the simultaneous monitoring of multiple subjects, or a single patient from multiple body locations by using only one reader. The promising results demonstrate that the proposed system is applicable to the Internet of Healthcare Things (IoHT), and particularly Integrated Clinical Environment (ICE) applications.

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