4.7 Article

Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Using Nonpulsatile Photoplethysmographic Components for Low-Frequency Vascular Unloading

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIM.2023.3267378

Keywords

Clamps; Biomedical monitoring; Fingers; Monitoring; Calibration; Pressure measurement; Volume measurement; hypertension; medical instruments; photoplethysmography; pressure sensors

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Continuous blood pressure monitoring is crucial for understanding cardiovascular health, and we propose a simple and effective technique that utilizes a wearable device to measure blood pressure based on the nonpulsatile component of the photoplethysmograph. Our method shows a high correlation and minimal error when compared to a reference device, making it a promising solution for remote continuous blood pressure monitoring.
Continuous blood pressure (BP) monitoring gives a better understanding of a person's cardiovascular health status than single BP measurements. The existing measurement techniques are often highly complex and expensive or suffer from inaccuracies. We propose a simple, yet effective technique for continuous BP monitoring. Our method is based on the finding that the nonpulsatile (dc) component of the photoplethysmograph (PPG) correlates with BP. By keeping the infrared (IR) PPG dc component constant by altering the applied external pressure using a feedback mechanism, the BP can be measured continuously. This way the pressure reading from the pressure sensor follows the mean intraarterial BP. We call this low-frequency vascular unloading. We propose a method for assessing the measurement error introduced by changes in vasomotor tone. Green PPG was used for the vasomotor compensation method. We packaged the technology into a wearable finger-worn device similar to a pulse oximeter probe. We measured over 90 min of continuous BP data from a total of seven subjects. The subjects were asked to perform different BP-altering maneuvers during the measurement. The ability to track BP changes was verified by continuous mean arterial pressure (MAP) readings measured with the reference device (CNSystems CNAP 500) and our device, resulting in the correlation of r = 0.894 and [(mean +/- SD) mmHg] of (0.3 +/- 4.3) mmHg for MAP. Without vasomotor tone compensation (VMC), the results were slightly less accurate: r = 0.83, (-1.4 +/- 5.1) mmHg. The proposed technology performed well compared to the traditional vascular unloading technique (VUT) while requiring significantly less complex control logic and no fast-switching pneumatics. The proposed technique is a simple, yet effective, low-cost solution and it can be constructed from off-the-shelf components and miniaturized into a wearable form factor. The technique has potential in the field of health wearables and remote continuous BP monitoring for personalized health applications.

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