4.6 Article

Non-Invasive Lactate Monitoring System Using Wearable Chipless Microwave Sensors With Enhanced Sensitivity and Zero Power Consumption

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 69, Issue 10, Pages 3175-3182

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TBME.2022.3162315

Keywords

Sensors; Resonant frequency; Monitoring; Microwave circuits; Sensitivity; Muscles; Real-time systems; High sensitivity; Microwave sensor; Non-invasive sensing; Real-time lactate monitoring; zero power consumption

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Dr. Rod Eidem Diabetes Research Fund
  3. University of Alberta Vice President of Research and Innovation Seed Grant Program

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Monitoring lactate levels in a non-invasive and real-time manner is important in critical care and sports. A new chipless tag resonator has been developed, which can be taped on the skin and coupled to a reader for electromagnetic detection. This technology allows accurate and reproducible measurement of lactate concentrations and has the potential for monitoring lactate in specific working muscle groups.
Monitoring lactate levels is an established method for determining hyperlactatemia in critically ill patients and assessing aerobic fitness. It is a widely used gold-standard technique in both professional and serious amateur sports. Non-invasive real-time lactate monitoring offers significant advantages over the current technology of finger-prick blood sampling. Possible candidate technology for developing non-invasive real-time lactate monitoring should be highly sensitive, flexible, and capable of real-time monitoring of lactate levels in interstitial fluid or within specific working muscle groups depending on the type of sport. Herein we describe a planar, flexible, passive, chipless tag resonator that is electromagnetically coupled to a reader placed in proximity to the lactate sensor tag. The tag resonator is a thin metallic tracing that can be taped on the skin. The resonance frequency of the tag fluctuates proportionately with changing lactate concentrations in a solution mimicking human interstitial fluid with very high sensitivity. The spectrum of the tag is reflected in the spectrum of the reader, which is a planar microwave resonator designed at a different frequency. The reader could be embedded in a cellphone or an application-specific wearable device for data communication and processing. The tag can accurately and reproducibly measure lactate concentrations in the range of 1 to 10 mM, which is in the physiological range of lactate observed at rest and during intense physical activity. Furthermore, the chrematistics of this technology will allow monitoring of lactate in specific working muscle groups.

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