DocumentCode
1345102
Title
Diabetes: Models, Signals, and Control
Author
Cobelli, Claudio ; Dalla Man, Chiara ; Sparacino, Giovanni ; Magni, Lalo ; De Nicolao, Giuseppe ; Kovatchev, Boris P.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Inf. Eng., Univ. of Padova, Padova, Italy
Volume
2
fYear
2009
fDate
7/1/1905 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
54
Lastpage
96
Abstract
The control of diabetes is an interdisciplinary endeavor, which includes a significant biomedical engineering component, with traditions of success beginning in the early 1960s. It began with modeling of the insulin-glucose system, and progressed to large-scale in silico experiments, and automated closed-loop control (artificial pancreas). Here, we follow these engineering efforts through the last, almost 50 years. We begin with the now classic minimal modeling approach and discuss a number of subsequent models, which have recently resulted in the first in silico simulation model accepted as substitute to animal trials in the quest for optimal diabetes control. We then review metabolic monitoring, with a particular emphasis on the new continuous glucose sensors, on the analyses of their time-series signals, and on the opportunities that they present for automation of diabetes control. Finally, we review control strategies that have been successfully employed in vivo or in silico, presenting a promise for the development of a future artificial pancreas and, in particular, discuss a modular architecture for building closed-loop control systems, including insulin delivery and patient safety supervision layers. We conclude with a brief discussion of the unique interactions between human physiology, behavioral events, engineering modeling and control relevant to diabetes.
Keywords
biomedical measurement; closed loop systems; diseases; medical computing; medical control systems; modelling; patient monitoring; patient treatment; artificial pancreas; automated closed loop control; biomedical engineering; closed loop control systems; continuous glucose sensors; diabetes control; diabetes model; in silico simulation model; insulin delivery; insulin-glucose system modeling; metabolic monitoring; patient safety supervision; Animals; Automatic control; Biomedical engineering; Computerized monitoring; Control systems; Diabetes; Large-scale systems; Optimal control; Pancreas; Sugar; Artificial pancreas; automatic control; identification; parameter estimation; physiological systems; sensors; signal processing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Reviews in
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1937-3333
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/RBME.2009.2036073
Filename
5342789
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