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The human body generates various forms of subtle, broadband acousto-mechanical signals that contain information on cardiorespiratory and gastrointestinal health with potential application for continuous physiological monitoring. Existing device options, ranging from digital stethoscopes to inertial measurement units, offer useful capabilities but have disadvantages such as restricted measurement locations that prevent continuous, longitudinal tracking and that constrain their use to controlled environments. Here we present a wireless, broadband acousto-mechanical sensing network that circumvents these limitations and provides information on processes including slow movements within the body, digestive activity, respiratory sounds and cardiac cycles, all with clinical grade accuracy and independent of artifacts from ambient sounds. This system can also perform spatiotemporal mapping of the dynamics of gastrointestinal processes and airflow into and out of the lungs. To demonstrate the capabilities of this system we used it to monitor constrained respiratory airflow and intestinal motility in neonates in the neonatal intensive care unit (n = 15), and to assess regional lung function in patients undergoing thoracic surgery (n = 55). This broadband acousto-mechanical sensing system holds the potential to help mitigate cardiorespiratory instability and manage disease progression in patients through continuous monitoring of physiological signals, in both the clinical and nonclinical setting.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-023-02637-5 | DOI Listing |
Nat Med
December 2023
Querrey Simpson Institute for Bioelectronics, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
The human body generates various forms of subtle, broadband acousto-mechanical signals that contain information on cardiorespiratory and gastrointestinal health with potential application for continuous physiological monitoring. Existing device options, ranging from digital stethoscopes to inertial measurement units, offer useful capabilities but have disadvantages such as restricted measurement locations that prevent continuous, longitudinal tracking and that constrain their use to controlled environments. Here we present a wireless, broadband acousto-mechanical sensing network that circumvents these limitations and provides information on processes including slow movements within the body, digestive activity, respiratory sounds and cardiac cycles, all with clinical grade accuracy and independent of artifacts from ambient sounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMater Horiz
January 2023
Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117575, Singapore.
Multifunctional materials are in high demand for practical engineering applications. Owing to the ubiquitous noise and impact energy hazards in many settings, traditional materials and conventionally designed metamaterials are incapable of preventing these types of hazard simultaneously. Herein, we report a new paradigm, a decoupled approach, in the design of acousto-mechanical multifunctional metamaterials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpt Express
August 2022
We describe the use of monolithic, buckled-dome cavities as ultrasound sensors. Patterned delamination within a compressively stressed thin film stack produces high-finesse plano-concave optical resonators with sealed and empty cavity regions. The buckled mirror also functions as a flexible membrane, highly responsive to changes in external pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
May 2016
School of Physics, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales 2052, Australia.
The frequencies, magnitudes, and bandwidths of vocal tract resonances are all important in understanding and synthesizing speech. High precision acoustic impedance spectra of the vocal tracts of 10 subjects were measured from 10 Hz to 4.2 kHz by injecting a broadband acoustic signal through the lips.
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