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Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces

Physiological mechano-acoustic signals, often with frequencies and intensities that are beyond those associated with the audible range, provide information of great clinical utility. Stethoscopes and digital accelerometers in conventional packages can capture some relevant data, but neither is suita...

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Autores principales: Liu, Yuhao, Norton, James J. S., Qazi, Raza, Zou, Zhanan, Ammann, Kaitlyn R., Liu, Hank, Yan, Lingqing, Tran, Phat L., Jang, Kyung-In, Lee, Jung Woo, Zhang, Douglas, Kilian, Kristopher A., Jung, Sung Hee, Bretl, Timothy, Xiao, Jianliang, Slepian, Marvin J., Huang, Yonggang, Jeong, Jae-Woong, Rogers, John A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association for the Advancement of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5262452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28138529
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1601185
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author Liu, Yuhao
Norton, James J. S.
Qazi, Raza
Zou, Zhanan
Ammann, Kaitlyn R.
Liu, Hank
Yan, Lingqing
Tran, Phat L.
Jang, Kyung-In
Lee, Jung Woo
Zhang, Douglas
Kilian, Kristopher A.
Jung, Sung Hee
Bretl, Timothy
Xiao, Jianliang
Slepian, Marvin J.
Huang, Yonggang
Jeong, Jae-Woong
Rogers, John A.
author_facet Liu, Yuhao
Norton, James J. S.
Qazi, Raza
Zou, Zhanan
Ammann, Kaitlyn R.
Liu, Hank
Yan, Lingqing
Tran, Phat L.
Jang, Kyung-In
Lee, Jung Woo
Zhang, Douglas
Kilian, Kristopher A.
Jung, Sung Hee
Bretl, Timothy
Xiao, Jianliang
Slepian, Marvin J.
Huang, Yonggang
Jeong, Jae-Woong
Rogers, John A.
author_sort Liu, Yuhao
collection PubMed
description Physiological mechano-acoustic signals, often with frequencies and intensities that are beyond those associated with the audible range, provide information of great clinical utility. Stethoscopes and digital accelerometers in conventional packages can capture some relevant data, but neither is suitable for use in a continuous, wearable mode, and both have shortcomings associated with mechanical transduction of signals through the skin. We report a soft, conformal class of device configured specifically for mechano-acoustic recording from the skin, capable of being used on nearly any part of the body, in forms that maximize detectable signals and allow for multimodal operation, such as electrophysiological recording. Experimental and computational studies highlight the key roles of low effective modulus and low areal mass density for effective operation in this type of measurement mode on the skin. Demonstrations involving seismocardiography and heart murmur detection in a series of cardiac patients illustrate utility in advanced clinical diagnostics. Monitoring of pump thrombosis in ventricular assist devices provides an example in characterization of mechanical implants. Speech recognition and human-machine interfaces represent additional demonstrated applications. These and other possibilities suggest broad-ranging uses for soft, skin-integrated digital technologies that can capture human body acoustics.
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spelling pubmed-52624522017-01-30 Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces Liu, Yuhao Norton, James J. S. Qazi, Raza Zou, Zhanan Ammann, Kaitlyn R. Liu, Hank Yan, Lingqing Tran, Phat L. Jang, Kyung-In Lee, Jung Woo Zhang, Douglas Kilian, Kristopher A. Jung, Sung Hee Bretl, Timothy Xiao, Jianliang Slepian, Marvin J. Huang, Yonggang Jeong, Jae-Woong Rogers, John A. Sci Adv Research Articles Physiological mechano-acoustic signals, often with frequencies and intensities that are beyond those associated with the audible range, provide information of great clinical utility. Stethoscopes and digital accelerometers in conventional packages can capture some relevant data, but neither is suitable for use in a continuous, wearable mode, and both have shortcomings associated with mechanical transduction of signals through the skin. We report a soft, conformal class of device configured specifically for mechano-acoustic recording from the skin, capable of being used on nearly any part of the body, in forms that maximize detectable signals and allow for multimodal operation, such as electrophysiological recording. Experimental and computational studies highlight the key roles of low effective modulus and low areal mass density for effective operation in this type of measurement mode on the skin. Demonstrations involving seismocardiography and heart murmur detection in a series of cardiac patients illustrate utility in advanced clinical diagnostics. Monitoring of pump thrombosis in ventricular assist devices provides an example in characterization of mechanical implants. Speech recognition and human-machine interfaces represent additional demonstrated applications. These and other possibilities suggest broad-ranging uses for soft, skin-integrated digital technologies that can capture human body acoustics. American Association for the Advancement of Science 2016-11-16 /pmc/articles/PMC5262452/ /pubmed/28138529 http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1601185 Text en Copyright © 2016, The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) , which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Liu, Yuhao
Norton, James J. S.
Qazi, Raza
Zou, Zhanan
Ammann, Kaitlyn R.
Liu, Hank
Yan, Lingqing
Tran, Phat L.
Jang, Kyung-In
Lee, Jung Woo
Zhang, Douglas
Kilian, Kristopher A.
Jung, Sung Hee
Bretl, Timothy
Xiao, Jianliang
Slepian, Marvin J.
Huang, Yonggang
Jeong, Jae-Woong
Rogers, John A.
Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces
title Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces
title_full Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces
title_fullStr Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces
title_full_unstemmed Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces
title_short Epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces
title_sort epidermal mechano-acoustic sensing electronics for cardiovascular diagnostics and human-machine interfaces
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5262452/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28138529
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1601185
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