DocumentCode
1377990
Title
BIOTEX—Biosensing Textiles for Personalised Healthcare Management
Author
Coyle, Shirley ; Lau, King-Tong ; Moyna, Niall ; Gorman, Donal O. ; Diamond, Dermot ; Di Francesco, Fabio ; Costanzo, Daniele ; Salvo, Pietro ; Trivella, M.G. ; De Rossi, Danilo Emilio ; Taccini, Nicola ; Paradiso, Rita ; Porchet, Jacque-André ; Ridolfi,
Author_Institution
CLARITY Centre for Sensor Web Technol., Dublin City Univ., Dublin, Ireland
Volume
14
Issue
2
fYear
2010
fDate
3/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
364
Lastpage
370
Abstract
Textile-based sensors offer an unobtrusive method of continually monitoring physiological parameters during daily activities. Chemical analysis of body fluids, noninvasively, is a novel and exciting area of personalized wearable healthcare systems. BIOTEX was an EU-funded project that aimed to develop textile sensors to measure physiological parameters and the chemical composition of body fluids, with a particular interest in sweat. A wearable sensing system has been developed that integrates a textile-based fluid handling system for sample collection and transport with a number of sensors including sodium, conductivity, and pH sensors. Sensors for sweat rate, ECG, respiration, and blood oxygenation were also developed. For the first time, it has been possible to monitor a number of physiological parameters together with sweat composition in real time. This has been carried out via a network of wearable sensors distributed around the body of a subject user. This has huge implications for the field of sports and human performance and opens a whole new field of research in the clinical setting.
Keywords
biomedical telemetry; biosensors; blood; body sensor networks; chemical sensors; electric sensing devices; electrocardiography; health care; patient monitoring; pneumodynamics; textiles; BIOTEX; ECG; biosensing textiles; blood oxygenation; body fluids; chemical analysis; conductivity; daily activities; pH sensors; personalised healthcare management; physiological parameters; respiration; sodium; sweat composition; textile-based fluid handling system; wearable sensing system; Biomedical equipment; biomedical monitoring; intelligent materials; multisensor systems; Abdomen; Artificial Intelligence; Clothing; Electrocardiography; Electronics, Medical; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Individualized Medicine; Monitoring, Physiologic; Oximetry; Respiration; Sternum; Sweat; Telemetry; Textiles; Thorax;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1089-7771
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TITB.2009.2038484
Filename
5373946
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