Recent Research and Developing Trends of Wearable Sensors for Detecting Blood Pressure
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Traditional and Basic Methods of Measuring Blood Pressure
2.1. Location of Measurement
2.2. The Auscultatory Method
2.3. The Oscillometric Technique
2.4. Ultrasound Techniques
2.5. The Finger Cuff Method of Penaz
2.6. Need for Cuffless Blood Pressure Measuring Systems
3. Development Cases of Cuffless Blood Pressure Measuring Systems
3.1. Portable Blood Pressure Measuring Systems
3.1.1. Wearable Sensor by Shuzo
3.1.2. HeartGuide by Omron Corp.
3.1.3. Blood Pressure Monitor by EchoLabs
3.2. Steering-Type Blood Pressure Measuring Systems
3.2.1. Cuffless Blood Pressure Monitoring Using Steering Wheel Sensor System by Denso Corp.
3.2.2. Steering-Type Blood Pressure Monitoring System by Arakawa et al.
- The blood pressure correlates positively with blood flow.
- The mural pressure correlates positively with the pressure against a tissue (e.g., the cuff pressure or application of the probe pressure).
- A constant probe pressure is applied to the tissue.
- The pressure difference is higher for the arteries than for the venous vessels.
- The photoplethysmographic signals are sensitive only to the hemoglobin dynamics.
- As a reference to determine the upper and lower limits of their blood pressure, the drivers input their systolic and diastolic blood pressures based on past diagnostics into the tablet.
- The pulse waves recorded when holding the steering wheel are detected to determine the reference finger plethysmogram, and the finger plethysmogram is tuned to the specified gain based on the amount of light and sensitivity.
- The tuned photoplethysmogram is considered a standard plethysmogram with regard to the average blood pressure. The ratio of diastolic blood pressure to the average blood pressure is added to the plethysmogram of the average blood pressure, which is determined as a plethysmogram of the diastolic blood pressure. A plethysmogram of the systolic blood pressure is calculated similarly based on the ratio of systolic blood pressure to the average blood pressure, and is considered a standard plethysmogram.
- The observed plethysmogram and plethysmogram of the standard blood pressure are compared, and the current average blood pressure is calculated. Next, the systolic and diastolic blood pressures are calculated based on the pulse pressure ratio calculated based on the ratio of height of the plethysmogram.
4. Comparison between Traditional Non-Invasive Blood Pressure Systems and Non-Invasive Cuffless Blood Pressure Systems
5. Future Prospects
6. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Method | Advantages | Disadvantages | Precision |
---|---|---|---|
Catheter | True value, continuous | Invasive | middle |
Korotokoff | Non-invasive | Cuff pressure, sensitive to sound | middle |
Oscillometric | Non-invasive | Cuff pressure, sensitive to movement | middle |
Tonometry | Non-invasive | Cuff pressure, sensitive to movement | good |
Vascular-volume compensation | Non-invasive, continuous | Cuff pressure control | good |
Cause | Error Factor | Systolic Blood Pressure | Diastolic Blood Pressure |
---|---|---|---|
Measurement position | Higher than right atrium | Decrease | Decrease |
Lower than right atrium | Increase | Increase | |
Narrow width | Increase | Increase | |
Measurement with cuff | Wide width | Decrease | Decrease |
Wrap loose | Increase | Increase | |
Measurement method | Slow reducing pressure | Decrease | Increase |
Low hearing ability | Decrease | Increase |
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Arakawa, T. Recent Research and Developing Trends of Wearable Sensors for Detecting Blood Pressure. Sensors 2018, 18, 2772. https://doi.org/10.3390/s18092772
Arakawa T. Recent Research and Developing Trends of Wearable Sensors for Detecting Blood Pressure. Sensors. 2018; 18(9):2772. https://doi.org/10.3390/s18092772
Chicago/Turabian StyleArakawa, Toshiya. 2018. "Recent Research and Developing Trends of Wearable Sensors for Detecting Blood Pressure" Sensors 18, no. 9: 2772. https://doi.org/10.3390/s18092772
APA StyleArakawa, T. (2018). Recent Research and Developing Trends of Wearable Sensors for Detecting Blood Pressure. Sensors, 18(9), 2772. https://doi.org/10.3390/s18092772