4.8 Review

Wearable Pressure Sensors for Pulse Wave Monitoring

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202109357

Keywords

cardiovascular diseases; microengineering; personalized healthcare; pressure sensors; pulse signals; wearable electronics

Funding

  1. Henry Samueli School of Engineering & Applied Science
  2. Department of Bioengineering at the University of California, Los Angeles
  3. 2021 Hellman Fellow Research Grant

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This study provides an overview of wearable pressure sensors for monitoring human pulse waves, focusing on the sensor mechanisms, microengineering structures, and applications in cardiovascular condition assessment. The study also discusses the opportunities and challenges faced by wearable pressure sensors, highlighting their potential as a wearable intelligent system for personalized healthcare.
Cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of death worldwide. The rapid development of flexible sensing technologies and wearable pressure sensors have attracted keen research interest and have been widely used for long-term and real-time cardiovascular status monitoring. Owing to compelling characteristics, including light weight, wearing comfort, and high sensitivity to pulse pressures, physiological pulse waveforms can be precisely and continuously monitored by flexible pressure sensors for wearable health monitoring. Herein, an overview of wearable pressure sensors for human pulse wave monitoring is presented, with a focus on the transduction mechanism, microengineering structures, and related applications in pulse wave monitoring and cardiovascular condition assessment. The conceptualizations and methods for the acquisition of physiological and pathological information related to the cardiovascular system are outlined. The biomechanics of arterial pulse waves and the working mechanism of various wearable pressure sensors, including triboelectric, piezoelectric, magnetoelastic, piezoresistive, capacitive, and optical sensors, are also subject to systematic debate. Exemple applications of pulse wave measurement based on microengineering structured devices are then summarized. Finally, a discussion of the opportunities and challenges that wearable pressure sensors face, as well as their potential as a wearable intelligent system for personalized healthcare is given in conclusion.

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