4.6 Article

Continuous Non-Invasive Blood Pressure Measurement Using 60 GHz-Radar-A Feasibility Study

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23084111

Keywords

FMCW radar; vital sensing; continuous blood pressure monitoring; signal processing; wearable device

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Blood pressure monitoring is crucial for assessing cardiovascular health, but current methods have limitations in capturing blood pressure variations and are inaccurate and uncomfortable. A radar-based approach using skin movement to extract pressure waves and a neural network regression model shows potential in capturing blood pressure variations and can be incorporated into wearable devices for continuous blood pressure monitoring after further improvements.
Blood pressure monitoring is of paramount importance in the assessment of a human's cardiovascular health. The state-of-the-art method remains the usage of an upper-arm cuff sphygmomanometer. However, this device suffers from severe limitations-it only provides a static blood pressure value pair, is incapable of capturing blood pressure variations over time, is inaccurate, and causes discomfort upon use. This work presents a radar-based approach that utilizes the movement of the skin due to artery pulsation to extract pressure waves. From those waves, a set of 21 features was collected and used-together with the calibration parameters of age, gender, height, and weight-as input for a neural network-based regression model. After collecting data from 55 subjects from radar and a blood pressure reference device, we trained 126 networks to analyze the developed approach's predictive power. As a result, a very shallow network with just two hidden layers produced a systolic error of 9.2 +/- 8.3mmHg (mean error +/- standard deviation) and a diastolic error of 7.7 +/- 5.7mmHg. While the trained model did not reach the requirements of the AAMI and BHS blood pressure measuring standards, optimizing network performance was not the goal of the proposed work. Still, the approach has displayed great potential in capturing blood pressure variation with the proposed features. The presented approach therefore shows great potential to be incorporated into wearable devices for continuous blood pressure monitoring for home use or screening applications, after improving this approach even further.

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