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Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts

Cast fixation is a general clinical skill used for the treatment of fractures. However, it may cause many complications due to careless treatment procedures. Currently, swathing a cast for a patient can only be determined by a doctors’ experience; however, this cannot be determined by the value of p...

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Autores principales: Tuan, Chiu-Ching, Lu, Chi-Heng, Wu, Yi-Chao, Yeh, Wen-Ling, Chen, Mei-Chuan, Lee, Tsair-Fwu, Chen, Yu-Jing, Kao, Hsuan-Kai
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6567028/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31137853
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19102417
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author Tuan, Chiu-Ching
Lu, Chi-Heng
Wu, Yi-Chao
Yeh, Wen-Ling
Chen, Mei-Chuan
Lee, Tsair-Fwu
Chen, Yu-Jing
Kao, Hsuan-Kai
author_facet Tuan, Chiu-Ching
Lu, Chi-Heng
Wu, Yi-Chao
Yeh, Wen-Ling
Chen, Mei-Chuan
Lee, Tsair-Fwu
Chen, Yu-Jing
Kao, Hsuan-Kai
author_sort Tuan, Chiu-Ching
collection PubMed
description Cast fixation is a general clinical skill used for the treatment of fractures. However, it may cause many complications due to careless treatment procedures. Currently, swathing a cast for a patient can only be determined by a doctors’ experience; however, this cannot be determined by the value of pressure, temperature, or humidity with objective and reliable equipment. When swathing a cast for a patient, the end result is often too tight or too loose. Hence, in this paper we developed a sensor for detecting pressure, temperature, and humidity, respectively. This could provide reliable reference cast data to help physicians to understand the tightness of cast swathing and to adjust the tightness of cast swathing instantly to alleviate a patient’s complications caused by excessive pressure or overheating. In this paper, six pressure sensors and one temperature–humidity sensor are used to detect the pressure, temperature, and humidity in an arm swathed with a cast to confirm whether the tightness of the cast is fixing the fracture efficiently, while avoiding causing any damage by using excessive pressure. Currently, the variation in temperature and humidity can be detected by the inflammation of the wound, displaying secretions, and fever in the cast. Based on the experiments, the voltage and power conversion coefficients of the developed sensors could be compensated for by the nonlinear error of the sensor. The experimental results could be instantly displayed on a human interface, such as a smart mobile device. The average skin pressure in a swathed cast was 12.14 g and ranged from 5.0 g to 17.5 g. A few casts exceeded 37.50 g. The abnormal pressure of wrinkles produced during swathing a cast often ranged from 22.50 g to 38.75 g. This shows that cast wrinkles cause pressure on the skin. The pressure caused by cast wrinkles on bone protrusions ranged from 56.5 g to 84.4 g. Compared to other parts that lacked soft skin cushioning, the pressure of cast wrinkles that occurred in the ulna near the protrusion of the wrist bone increased averagely. The pressure error value was less than 2%, the temperature error was less than 1%, and the humidity error was less than 5%. Therefore, they were all in line with the specifications of commercially available products. The six pressure detection points and one temperature and humidity detection point in our newly designed system can accurately measure the pressure, temperature, and humidity inside the cast, and instantly display the corresponding information by mobile APP. Doctors receive reliable reference data and are instantly able to understand the tightness of the swathed cast and adjust it at any time to avoid complications caused by pressure or overheating due to excessive pressure.
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spelling pubmed-65670282019-06-17 Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts Tuan, Chiu-Ching Lu, Chi-Heng Wu, Yi-Chao Yeh, Wen-Ling Chen, Mei-Chuan Lee, Tsair-Fwu Chen, Yu-Jing Kao, Hsuan-Kai Sensors (Basel) Article Cast fixation is a general clinical skill used for the treatment of fractures. However, it may cause many complications due to careless treatment procedures. Currently, swathing a cast for a patient can only be determined by a doctors’ experience; however, this cannot be determined by the value of pressure, temperature, or humidity with objective and reliable equipment. When swathing a cast for a patient, the end result is often too tight or too loose. Hence, in this paper we developed a sensor for detecting pressure, temperature, and humidity, respectively. This could provide reliable reference cast data to help physicians to understand the tightness of cast swathing and to adjust the tightness of cast swathing instantly to alleviate a patient’s complications caused by excessive pressure or overheating. In this paper, six pressure sensors and one temperature–humidity sensor are used to detect the pressure, temperature, and humidity in an arm swathed with a cast to confirm whether the tightness of the cast is fixing the fracture efficiently, while avoiding causing any damage by using excessive pressure. Currently, the variation in temperature and humidity can be detected by the inflammation of the wound, displaying secretions, and fever in the cast. Based on the experiments, the voltage and power conversion coefficients of the developed sensors could be compensated for by the nonlinear error of the sensor. The experimental results could be instantly displayed on a human interface, such as a smart mobile device. The average skin pressure in a swathed cast was 12.14 g and ranged from 5.0 g to 17.5 g. A few casts exceeded 37.50 g. The abnormal pressure of wrinkles produced during swathing a cast often ranged from 22.50 g to 38.75 g. This shows that cast wrinkles cause pressure on the skin. The pressure caused by cast wrinkles on bone protrusions ranged from 56.5 g to 84.4 g. Compared to other parts that lacked soft skin cushioning, the pressure of cast wrinkles that occurred in the ulna near the protrusion of the wrist bone increased averagely. The pressure error value was less than 2%, the temperature error was less than 1%, and the humidity error was less than 5%. Therefore, they were all in line with the specifications of commercially available products. The six pressure detection points and one temperature and humidity detection point in our newly designed system can accurately measure the pressure, temperature, and humidity inside the cast, and instantly display the corresponding information by mobile APP. Doctors receive reliable reference data and are instantly able to understand the tightness of the swathed cast and adjust it at any time to avoid complications caused by pressure or overheating due to excessive pressure. MDPI 2019-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6567028/ /pubmed/31137853 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19102417 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Tuan, Chiu-Ching
Lu, Chi-Heng
Wu, Yi-Chao
Yeh, Wen-Ling
Chen, Mei-Chuan
Lee, Tsair-Fwu
Chen, Yu-Jing
Kao, Hsuan-Kai
Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts
title Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts
title_full Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts
title_fullStr Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts
title_full_unstemmed Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts
title_short Development of a System for Real-Time Monitoring of Pressure, Temperature, and Humidity in Casts
title_sort development of a system for real-time monitoring of pressure, temperature, and humidity in casts
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6567028/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31137853
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19102417
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