Title :
Wearable transducer to monitor respiration in a wireless way
Author :
Kim, K.A. ; Lee, I.K. ; Choi, S.S. ; Kim, S.S. ; Lee, T.S. ; Cha, E.J.
Author_Institution :
Chunguk Nat. Univ., Cheongju
Abstract :
Conductive rubber belt with electrical resistance changed by lengthening was incorporated within the patient´s pants, which operated as a waist band transducer. The resistance changes induced by the abdominal dimension variation during breathing were converted into a voltage signal by a bridge circuit, then digitized followed by wireless transmission with zigbee protocol. The wireless transmission module was implemented small enough to carry conveniently in pocket. The wireless receiver module was also made to forward the signal to a local computer station through RS232 serial communication port, where respiration was monitored. CO2 inhalation experiments were performed in 4 normal men to evaluate measurement accuracy in the tidal volume(VT). 0~5% CO2 inhalation for a few minutes increased VT upto approximately twice in steady state with corresponding increase in the abdominal signal. Customized calibration by CO2 inhalation experiment for each subject resulted a mean relative error of 8% perhaps acceptable for general monitoring purposes. The present results enable wireless remote monitoring of respiration, thus could be applied to a ubiquitous health care system.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; biomedical transducers; calibration; patient monitoring; personal area networks; pneumodynamics; RS232 serial communication port; abdominal dimension variation; breathing; calibration; conductive rubber belt; electrical resistance; respiration; ubiquitous health care system; voltage signal; wearable transducer; wireless transmission; zigbee protocol; Abdomen; Belts; Biomedical monitoring; Bridge circuits; Electric resistance; Patient monitoring; Remote monitoring; Rubber; Transducers; Voltage; Abdominal dimension measurement; Wearable respiratory transducer; Wireless respiratory monitoring;
Conference_Titel :
Information Technology Applications in Biomedicine, 2007. ITAB 2007. 6th International Special Topic Conference on
Conference_Location :
Tokyo
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1867-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1868-8
DOI :
10.1109/ITAB.2007.4407372