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Skin-interfaced biosensors for advanced wireless physiological monitoring in neonatal and pediatric intensive-care units.

Authors :
Chung HU
Rwei AY
Hourlier-Fargette A
Xu S
Lee K
Dunne EC
Xie Z
Liu C
Carlini A
Kim DH
Ryu D
Kulikova E
Cao J
Odland IC
Fields KB
Hopkins B
Banks A
Ogle C
Grande D
Park JB
Kim J
Irie M
Jang H
Lee J
Park Y
Kim J
Jo HH
Hahm H
Avila R
Xu Y
Namkoong M
Kwak JW
Suen E
Paulus MA
Kim RJ
Parsons BV
Human KA
Kim SS
Patel M
Reuther W
Kim HS
Lee SH
Leedle JD
Yun Y
Rigali S
Son T
Jung I
Arafa H
Soundararajan VR
Ollech A
Shukla A
Bradley A
Schau M
Rand CM
Marsillio LE
Harris ZL
Huang Y
Hamvas A
Paller AS
Weese-Mayer DE
Lee JY
Rogers JA
Source :
Nature medicine [Nat Med] 2020 Mar; Vol. 26 (3), pp. 418-429. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Mar 11.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Standard clinical care in neonatal and pediatric intensive-care units (NICUs and PICUs, respectively) involves continuous monitoring of vital signs with hard-wired devices that adhere to the skin and, in certain instances, can involve catheter-based pressure sensors inserted into the arteries. These systems entail risks of causing iatrogenic skin injuries, complicating clinical care and impeding skin-to-skin contact between parent and child. Here we present a wireless, non-invasive technology that not only offers measurement equivalency to existing clinical standards for heart rate, respiration rate, temperature and blood oxygenation, but also provides a range of important additional features, as supported by data from pilot clinical studies in both the NICU and PICU. These new modalities include tracking movements and body orientation, quantifying the physiological benefits of skin-to-skin care, capturing acoustic signatures of cardiac activity, recording vocal biomarkers associated with tonality and temporal characteristics of crying and monitoring a reliable surrogate for systolic blood pressure. These platforms have the potential to substantially enhance the quality of neonatal and pediatric critical care.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1546-170X
Volume :
26
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32161411
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-0792-9