1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a method and system of monitoring a biological signal by radio. More particularly, the present invention relates to a method and system of monitoring a respiratory signal by radio, in which a respiratory frequency and a lung volume are precisely measured using an elastic device fastened around the abdomen without the trouble of measuring the biological signal, the respiratory signal, which is most frequently measured for inpatients, through an oral cavity.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In general, respiration is a physiological function that supplies fresh air (oxygen) into the body and then releases a byproduct, carbon dioxide, of the metabolism out of the body, and thus is essential for life. The respiration, blood pressure, pulse, and body temperature are important biological signals showing a vital sign, and thus are the highest measurement frequency of biological signals that must be measured three or four times for all the inpatients of the hospital from day to day. For this reason, whether or not the respiration occurs or measuring and monitoring an amount of respiration is very important medically.
Up to now, respiratory airflow transducer, respiratory inductive plethysmography, contactless respiration measurement, and breathing air temperature measurement have been used or studied for sensing, measuring, and monitoring of a breathing signal.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
Elastic bands, in which thorax and abdomen coils 21 and 22 of conductive metal are disposed in a zigzag shape, are fastened to the thorax and abdomen of the testee, respectively. As the peripheries of the thorax and abdomen of the testee, to whom the thorax coil 21 and the abdomen coil 22 are attached breathes, are varied while the testee breathes, a distance between the adjacent crests (or roots) of each zigzag coil is varied or displaced. Thereby, the inductances 23 of the thorax and abdomen coils that are attached to the thorax and the abdomen are changed and measured electrically. At this time, although the lung volumes are equal to each other, the contributions of the thorax and the abdomen to the lung volumes are dependent on the testee. Thus, the relative contributions k1 and k2 of each testee are calculated and applied in advance.
However, the respiratory inductive plethysmography is difficult to handle, and furthermore is impossible to wash with water, because the separate elastic bands must be fastened on the clothes and because the metal coils are attached in the elastic bands. Further, because the AC signal is required to measure the change of the inductance, a signal extracting circuit, which includes circuits of generating and measuring the AC signal having constant frequency and amplitude, becomes complicated.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
When a sensor (e.g. thermocouple or thermistor) 41 for sensing a temperature is located near the nostrils of the testee, a period of temperature change is equal to a respiratory period, so that it can be calculated to measure a respiratory frequency. However, this technique can measure only the respiratory frequency, but not a variable related to ventilation (i.e. the volume of air breathed in and out of the lungs) such as a lung volume. According to the normal physiological function of the body, the lung volume is increased first when the metabolism of the body increases to require increasing the ventilation, and then the respiratory frequency is increased only for still greater ventilation. Taking this fact into consideration, the measurement of the respiratory frequency makes it possible to determine whether or not the respiration occurs, but it makes it impossible to measure the ventilation that is more important than the respiratory frequency from the physiological viewpoint.
Accordingly, the present invention has been made keeping in mind the above problems occurring in the prior art, and a first object of the present invention is to provide a method of monitoring a respiratory signal by radio, in which the respiratory signal is monitored using an elastic waistband made of conductive rubber is fastened around the abdomen of a testee without the trouble of holding the breathing pipe in the mouth of the testee, thereby providing a personal customized respiratory measurement technique that accurately measures a respiratory frequency and measures a lung volume within an allowable error range, and transmitting and monitoring the measured respiratory signal by radio.
A second object of the present invention is to provide a system for accomplishing the first object.
To accomplish these objects, according to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of monitoring a respiratory signal by radio. The method comprises: a respiratory signal measuring and transmitting step of converting a change in electric resistance, which is caused by a change in abdominal circumference measured through a rubber waistband that is made of conductive rubber and is mounted on a lower garment of a testee during respiration, into a voltage signal, performing analog/digital (A/D) conversion on the voltage signal, and transmitting the converted digital signal to a short distance by radio using a wireless communication protocol for ZigBee; and a respiratory signal receiving and monitoring step of receiving the respiratory signal transmitted by radio, transmitting it to a computer unit by wire through an RS-232 port that is a serial communication port, and enabling a tester to monitor the respiratory signal through a screen.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a system of monitoring a respiratory signal by radio. The system comprises: a connector that is connected to opposite ends of a rubber waistband, the rubber waistband being mounted on a lower garment of a testee and being made of rubber including conductive particles; a radio transmitter that is electrically connected with the connector, converts a change in electric resistance, which is caused by a change in abdominal circumference measured through the rubber waistband during respiration, into a voltage signal, performs analog/digital (A/D) conversion on the voltage signal, and transmits the converted digital signal to a short distance by radio using a wireless communication protocol for ZigBee; and a radio receiver that receives the respiratory signal, transmitted by radio using the ZigBee wireless communication protocol, through a reception antenna, converts the respiratory signal into serial information, and outputs the converted serial information through a RS-232 port. The respiratory signal is monitored by calculating the input respiratory signal and checkup parameters at the radio receiver, and outputting the calculated result to a monitor screen.
The above and other objects, features and other advantages of the present invention will be more clearly understood from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
a is a conceptual view for explaining a respiratory airflow transducer used for detecting, measuring, and monitoring a respiratory signal;
b is a conceptual view for explaining a respiratory inductive plethysmogrpahy used for detecting, measuring, and monitoring a respiratory signal;
c is a conceptual view for explaining contactless respiration measurement used for detecting, measuring, and monitoring a respiratory signal;
d is a conceptual view for explaining breathing air temperature measurement used for detecting, measuring, and monitoring a respiratory signal;
Hereinafter, exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail.
As illustrated in
While the testee respires, the abdomen of the testee is changed in circumference, and simultaneously the rubber waistband 110 elongates (i.e., expands) or contracts. The rubber waistband 110 therefore changes in cross section and length, and thereby changes in electric resistance. A radio transmitter 120 connected to the rubber waistband 110 converts the electric resistance change, which is input through the rubber waistband 110, into an analog voltage signal, performs A/D conversion on the voltage signal, and transmits the respiratory signal based on digital information to a short distance using a wireless communication protocol for ZigBee.
The radio transmitter 120 is put into a pocket of the lower or upper garment of the testee in electrical connection with the rubber waistband 110. The ZigBee wireless communication protocol applied to the radio transmitter 120 conforms to the IEEE 802.15.4 wireless standard for data networks, operates in frequency bands 2.4 GHz, 868 MHz, and 915 MHz, uses direct-sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) coding, has a data transfer rate from 20 kbps to 250 kbps.
The radio signal transmitted from the radio transmitter 120 is received by a radio receiver 130. The radio receiver 130 receives the respiratory signal transmitted using the ZigBee wireless communication protocol, and transmits it to a computer unit 140 such as a personal computer (PC) by wire through an RS-232 port that is a serial communication port, so that it enables a tester to monitor the respiratory signal through a screen.
The respiratory signal transmitted to the computer unit 140 is continuously displayed on the screen, and exhibits clinically important checkup parameters, such as a tidal volume, a respiration frequency, and a minute ventilation, at fixed periods.
The testee is guaranteed mobility within a predetermined distance in which transmission and reception are performed by radio, and the respiratory signal of the testee is transmitted and monitored by radio without a stop in motion. Accordingly, the trouble of the testee is reduced during the respiration checkup.
As illustrated in
The conductive rubber used for the rubber waistband 110 of the present invention is produced by mixing a small quantity of conductive particles (e.g. of carbon, platinum, etc.) when a rubber as a nonconductor is formed in a desired shape. In this case in which the conductive rubber is produced so as to have the range from tens of Ω to several kΩ according to a mixing ratio, the electric resistance change caused by the change in length can be easily measured.
As illustrated in
In this manner, when the length is changed within a range of 1 cm or less (range from 56 cm to 57 cm in
The electric resistance change measured through the rubber waistband 110 is input into the radio transmitter 120. As illustrated in
In Equation 1, VE is the DC voltage that drives the bridge circuit.
When the testee begins to inhale, the electric resistance increases to R+ΔR, and thus the voltage V+ of Equation 1 is transformed into the following Equation 2.
In Equation 2, if the change ΔR of the electric resistance that is increased by inhalation is sufficiently less than R (i.e. R>>ΔR), ΔR/R of the denominator is approximated to 0, and thus Equation 2 is transformed into the following Equation 3.
In Equation 3, because the voltage V− maintains the value, VE/2, of Equation 1 irrespective of the elongation of the conductive rubber waistband (
Accordingly, the voltage difference between V+ and V− is proportional to the electric resistance change ΔR of the conductive rubber waistband. In other words, when the DC Wheatstone bridge circuit 122 of
The voltage signal amplified by the differential amplifier circuit 124 is applied to a low-pass filter circuit 125, and then the low-pass filter circuit 125 extracts a voltage signal corresponding to the respiratory signal, from which high-band noise is minimized by allowing only a low-band signal to pass therethrough.
The respiratory signal output from the low-pass filter circuit 125 is input into an A/D converter circuit 126, and thereby is converted into a digital signal. In other words, because the respiratory signal output from the low-pass filter circuit 125 is an analog voltage signal, it is converted into a digital signal (information) by the A/D converter circuit 126.
The digital signal output from the A/D converter circuit 126 is input into a ZigBee transmission circuit 127, and then is transmitted to a short distance through a transmission antenna 128 by radio. The A/D converter circuit and the ZigBee transmission circuit can be easily realized using a commercialized semiconductor chip. Since the entire radio transmitter 120 can be configured of a low electric power circuit, it can be operated with a dry battery, and be reduced in size when produced. As a result, the radio transmitter is designed to be carried in a pocket of a lower or upper garment of the testee. In this manner, because the radio transmitter 120 is carried in the pocket, the respiratory signal of the testee can be freely monitored during moving within a range in which it can be received by radio.
As illustrated in
In
The testee held a respiratory airflow transducer in his/her mouth, and then accurate respiratory airflow and a tidal volume were measured together with an abdominal respiratory signal. It can be seen from the correlation between the abdominal respiratory signal and the tidal volume as shown in
Therefore, the fact that the system of monitoring a respiratory signal by radio according to the present invention could estimate the tidal volume in a relatively accurate manner by monitoring the respiratory signal from the conductive rubber waistband 110 by radio was experimentally proved.
As described above, when the abdominal respiratory signals are monitored using the conductive rubber waistband (or belt), the respiratory frequencies can be accurately measured without an error as in the graph of
This relative error is attributed to a relative ratio at which the respiration varies the volumes of the thorax and abdomen and is distributed to the thorax and the abdomen. As such, the contribution of the thorax is regarded as nothing in the present invention because only the tidal volume of the abdomen is measured. Although the contributions of the thorax and abdomen are different from each other depending on the testees, they are invariably maintained to each particular testee. Thus, the tidal volume can be reliably measured even when it is measured respect to only the abdomen. In other words, after each testee is subjected to customized calibration in terms of an individual difference, the respiratory signals are measured. Thereby, accurate measurement results can be obtained.
The system of monitoring a respiratory signal by radio according to the present invention is designed so that the elastic conductive rubber waistband (or belt) serving as the respiratory sensor is mounted on the lower garment of the patient. The lower garments are not exchanged between the patients, so that the personal customized calibration is effective. As shown in
As can be seen from the foregoing, the present invention improves convenience of use because it does not provide the trouble of mounting a separate unit in the mouth or nose when the respiratory signals is measured and checked up, can be cleaned due to the conductive rubber material unlike a complete conductor, and can be the garment wearable type serving as the belt for the waist. Further, because the DC is used instead of the AC when the signal is extracted, the circuit is simplified. Due to the radio transmission mode, the measurement is performed in a free state without restricting activity of the patient. Furthermore, the respiratory monitoring is possible during moving. In addition, the accurate lung volume can be estimated only by the abdomen respiratory measurement through the personal customized calibration.
Although a preferred embodiment of the present invention has been described for illustrative purposes, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications, additions and substitutions are possible, without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as disclosed in the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10-2007-0054379 | Jun 2007 | KR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4308872 | Watson et al. | Jan 1982 | A |
4391279 | Stein | Jul 1983 | A |
4815473 | Watson et al. | Mar 1989 | A |
5913830 | Miles | Jun 1999 | A |
6287264 | Hoffman | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6416471 | Kumar et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6454708 | Ferguson et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6551252 | Sackner et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
6778090 | Newham | Aug 2004 | B2 |
7094206 | Hoffman | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7314451 | Halperin et al. | Jan 2008 | B2 |
7429247 | Okada et al. | Sep 2008 | B2 |
20020032386 | Sackner et al. | Mar 2002 | A1 |
20020120207 | Hoffman | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20030100843 | Hoffman | May 2003 | A1 |
20030135127 | Sackner et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20060241510 | Halperin et al. | Oct 2006 | A1 |
20060282001 | Noel et al. | Dec 2006 | A1 |
20070293781 | Sims et al. | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20080077020 | Young et al. | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20080097250 | Tochigi et al. | Apr 2008 | A1 |
20080269625 | Halperin et al. | Oct 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080300503 A1 | Dec 2008 | US |