Title :
Ultra-low power design of wearable cardiac monitoring systems
Author :
Braojos, R. ; Mamaghanian, Hossein ; Dias, Andre ; Ansaloni, G. ; Atienza, David ; Rincon, Francisco J. ; Murali, S.
Author_Institution :
Embedded Syst. Lab., EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract :
This paper presents the system-level architecture of novel ultra-low power wireless body sensor nodes (WBSNs) for real-time cardiac monitoring and analysis, and discusses the main design challenges of this new generation of medical devices. In particular, it highlights first the unsustainable energy cost incurred by the straightforward wireless streaming of raw data to external analysis servers. Then, it introduces the need for new cross-layered design methods (beyond hardware and software boundaries) to enhance the autonomy of WBSNs for ambulatory monitoring. In fact, by embedding more onboard intelligence and exploiting electrocardiogram (ECG) specific knowledge, it is possible to perform real-time compressive sensing, filtering, delineation and classification of heartbeats, while dramatically extending the battery lifetime of cardiac monitoring systems. The paper concludes by showing the results of this new approach to design ultra-low power wearable WBSNs in a real-life platform commercialized by SmartCardia. This wearable system allows a wide range of applications, including multi-lead ECG arrhythmia detection and autonomous sleep monitoring for critical scenarios, such as monitoring of the sleep state of airline pilots.
Keywords :
biomedical electronics; body sensor networks; compressed sensing; electrocardiography; low-power electronics; medical signal detection; medical signal processing; signal classification; ECG specific knowledge; SmartCardia; WBSN autonomy; ambulatory monitoring; battery lifetime; cross layered design methods; electrocardiogram; heartbeat classification; heartbeat delineation; medical devices; onboard intelligence embedding; real time cardiac monitoring; real time compressive sensing; signal filtering; system level architecture; ultralow power WBSN; ultralow power design; wearable cardiac monitoring systems; wireless body sensor nodes; wireless data streaming; Biomedical monitoring; Computer architecture; Electrocardiography; Monitoring; Real-time systems; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks; Bio-Medical Signal Processing; Wearable Embedded Systems; Wireless Body Sensor Nodes;
Conference_Titel :
Design Automation Conference (DAC), 2014 51st ACM/EDAC/IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA