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Wireless broadband acousto-mechanical sensing system for continuous physiological monitoring

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NATURE MEDICINE
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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-023-02637-5

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This study presents a wireless, broadband acousto-mechanical sensing network for continuous monitoring of physiological signals in the human body. The system provides clinical-grade accuracy and can be used in both clinical and nonclinical settings.
The human body generates various forms of subtle, broadband acousto-mechanical signals that contain information on cardiorespiratory and gastrointestinal health with potential application for continuous physiological monitoring. Existing device options, ranging from digital stethoscopes to inertial measurement units, offer useful capabilities but have disadvantages such as restricted measurement locations that prevent continuous, longitudinal tracking and that constrain their use to controlled environments. Here we present a wireless, broadband acousto-mechanical sensing network that circumvents these limitations and provides information on processes including slow movements within the body, digestive activity, respiratory sounds and cardiac cycles, all with clinical grade accuracy and independent of artifacts from ambient sounds. This system can also perform spatiotemporal mapping of the dynamics of gastrointestinal processes and airflow into and out of the lungs. To demonstrate the capabilities of this system we used it to monitor constrained respiratory airflow and intestinal motility in neonates in the neonatal intensive care unit (n = 15), and to assess regional lung function in patients undergoing thoracic surgery (n = 55). This broadband acousto-mechanical sensing system holds the potential to help mitigate cardiorespiratory instability and manage disease progression in patients through continuous monitoring of physiological signals, in both the clinical and nonclinical setting. Wireless sensing devices placed on the skin can capture a wide spectrum of acoustic and mechanical signals at several body locations simultaneously for monitoring of internal body processes such as cardiorespiratory function, gastrointestinal activity, swallowing and respiration.

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