4.7 Article

A Noninvasive Miniaturized Transcutaneous Oxygen Monitor

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TBCAS.2021.3094931

Keywords

Blood gases; PtcO(2); respiration parameters; SpO(2); transcutaneous oxygen; vital parameters; wearables; wireless monitoring

Funding

  1. WPI's Transformative Research and Innovation, Accelerating Discovery (TRIAD) [10706-GR]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Transcutaneous monitoring is a noninvasive method that continuously measures oxygen and carbon dioxide diffusion through the skin, with this study demonstrating a prototype monitor using luminescence technology to accurately measure transcutaneous oxygen levels. The sensor showed a stable performance under fixed conditions, accurately measuring oxygen partial pressure changes in a relevant medical range in lab testing.
Transcutaneous monitoring is a noninvasive method to continuously measure the partial pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide that diffuse through the skin and correlate closely with changes in blood gases. However, the contemporary commercially available electrochemical-based technology requires a heating mechanism and a bulky, corded, and expensive sensing unit. This study aims to demonstrate a prototype noninvasive, miniaturized monitor that uses luminescence-based technology to measure the partial pressure of transcutaneous oxygen, a surrogate of the partial pressure of arterial oxygen. To be able to build a robust measurement system, we conducted experiments to understand the temperature and humidity dependence of oxygen-sensitive platinum-porphyrin films. We performed a detailed analysis of both intensity and lifetime measurement techniques. To verify the performance, we tested the prototype in a small ex-vivo experiment involving three healthy human volunteers. We measured variations in the partial pressure of transcutaneous oxygen values due to pressure-induced arterial and venous occlusions on the volunteers' fingertips. The system resolves changes in the partial pressure of oxygen from 0 to 418 mmHg in the lab bench-top testing, covering the medically relevant range of 50-150 mmHg. Under fixed humidity, temperature, and the partial pressure of oxygen conditions, the sensor shows a 2% drift over 60 hours. The prototype consumes 9 mW of power from a 2.2 V external DC power supply.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available