The present disclosure relates to physiological sensors, and in particular, to a multi-parameter sensor system for measuring physiological signals.
Traditional surface physiological electrodes work as transducers for transforming skin potentials into electrical voltages. Typically, the detected potential and currents are small (voltage V is less or in the order of 10 microV, and current I is less than or in the order of nA) while unrelated physiological electrical noise (i.e. non-signal or artifact) can reach several hundred mV. There are several sources of electrical artifacts in bioelectrical measurements, which may impact the quality of the results.
For example, the salt ion diffusion through the skin surface creates a so-called double layer and corresponding potentials can reach several tens of mV. The skin deformation changes ion distribution of the skin surface that generates low frequency deformation electrical potentials (or deformation potentials) which is much higher than typical ECG voltages.
The contact between body electrolytes and the surface of a solid conductive electrode also generates half-cell potentials of the order of several hundreds mV. The potential between solid conductor and body electrolyte is another source of strong motion artifact.
The high impedance of the stratum corneum is another source of electrical artifact.
The delivery of weak electrical signals from electrodes to a high impedance detecting system is a strong source of noise due to stray capacitance and the tri-bielectricity of cables, environmental electromagnetic fields and embedded static charges. These factors are very sensitive to body motion.
When multiple signals are measured, one or more measurement subsystems can inject unwanted signals into other measurement subsystem, e.g. bio-impedance measurement into ECG and/or sweat.
Improper placement of separate electrodes for sensing multiple signals in an attempt to minimize electromagnetic (EM) susceptibility between the multiple sensors impacts the sensor signal quality due to insufficient physical space on the body to properly place the electrodes.
Existing techniques used to reduce these artifacts include skin preparation by abrading, using electrolytic gel, conditioning of the skin by passing electrical energy or heating, real time impedance control systems, application of high impedance active electronics attached to the electrodes, mechanical stabilization of electrodes, puncturing the skin with micro needles, and application of an additional sensor for motion detection.
There are several drawbacks associated with the use of traditional electrodes. The abrasive skin preparation and puncturing involves discomfort, prolong procedure time and require operator skill whereas the body will heal micro-punctures, skin abrasions and re-grow hair causing signal degradation and thus cannot be used for long term home or hospital applications. The gel electrode application causes signal degradation as a result gel drying, itching, and the possibility of rash from allergic skin reaction and cause considerable discomfort and damage on removal. The use of algorithms to remove the motion artifact can lead to erasing portions of important physiological information. The use of micro needles, heating or passing electrical energy leads to discomfort, skin damage and time-dependent impedance instability. Electrode placement can be difficult due to common or interfering placement requirements of separate measurement subsystems, related susceptibility and signal degradation etc.
Other problems associated with multi-parameter physiological sensors include an increased power consumption and footprint that is problematic on portable and multi-use sensor systems.
This background information is provided to reveal information believed by the applicant to be of possible relevance. No admission is necessarily intended, nor should be construed, that any of the preceding information constitutes prior art.
The following presents a simplified summary of the general inventive concept(s) described herein to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the invention. This summary is not an extensive overview of the invention. It is not intended to restrict key or critical elements of the invention or to delineate the scope of the invention beyond that which is explicitly or implicitly described by the following description and claims.
A need exists for a multi-parameter sensor system for measuring physiological signals that overcome some of the drawbacks of known techniques, or at least, provide a useful alternative thereto. Some aspects of this disclosure provide examples of such sensor systems.
The disclosed subject matter, therefore, according to an exemplary aspect, provides for a physiological sensor system to be worn on a subject's skin to measure one or more physiological parameters, the system comprising: at least one pair of sensing electrodes that measure, when in contact with the subject's skin, physiological signals indicative of the one or more physiological parameters; first and second reference electrodes that concurrently provide a source signal and a reference signal for said sensing electrodes in their measurement of the one or more physiological parameters; and a subject-securing device for securing said sensing electrodes and said first and second reference electrodes against the subject's skin in operation.
The disclosed subject matter, according to another exemplary aspect, provides for a multi-parameter sensor system for measuring physiological signals in a subject, the bioelectrical signals being indicative of physiological parameters, which in some cases is susceptible to non-signal artifacts, the system, in this exemplary aspect, comprising a plurality of electrodes configured to concurrently provide multiple functionalities, such functionalities may include a measurement of physiological signals, a reduction of non-signal artifacts, a current source, a current sink, reference electrode(s), the system further comprising: at least one pair of sensing electrodes that measure physiological signals indicative of physiological parameters, the physiological parameters may include body bio-impedance (possibly in cases where the reference electrodes are acting as a signal source by driving a signal across the body of the subject), ECG, skin-electrode impedance (possibly in cases where the reference electrodes are not acting as a signal source), and sweat-induced, sweat-dependent or other sweat-related physiological signals (possibly when the sensing electrodes are individually cooperating with the conducting electrodes); first and second reference electrodes that concurrently provide (1) a signal source for the first and second sensing electrodes in their measurement of one or more of the physiological parameters and (2) a reference for the sensing electrodes, possibly for any two or more combinations of other electrodes during measurement of the body bio-impedance, skin-electrode bio-impedance, ECG, sweat sensors, acoustic sensors, light sensors, thermal sensors, motion sensors, radiation sensors and other signals measured or detected by the multi-parameter sensor system; and a subject-securing device for securing the sensing electrodes and the reference electrodes against an outer surface of the subject. As such, physiological signals, and other non-physiological signals (which may or may not be related to such physiological signals may be measured) including accelerometry and radiation. These signals may be used on their own or in connection with physiological signals, in either case to provide information relating to the subject.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a method of concurrently measuring distinct physiological parameters from a subject using a same pair of sensing electrodes and an associated pair of grounding reference electrodes, each in contact with the subject's skin to define a measurement site therebetween, the method comprising: collecting physiological signals via said pair of sensing electrodes; splitting said collected bioelectrical signals in accordance with distinct frequency domains respectively associated with each of the distinct physiological parameters; and switching the reference electrodes between an active mode in which a current is provided across the measurement site and a passive mode in which said current is not provided, wherein said active mode and said passive mode cause the sensing electrodes to assess respective ones of said distinct physiological parameters.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a method of concurrently measuring a plurality of physiological signals in a subject, the physiological signals being indicative of physiological parameters, but which may in some cases be susceptible to non-signal artifacts, using a plurality of electrodes, each electrode configured to provide at least two concurrent functionalities and being affixed on a subject facing side of a subject securing device, the concurrent functionalities comprising two or more of the following functionalities: measuring at least one physiological signals, reducing non-signal artifacts, providing a current source, providing a current sink, providing a reference electrode, the method comprising: collecting physiological signals across a circuit that includes the subject when a first sensing electrode and a second sensing electrode from the plurality of electrodes are in contact therewith; splitting the physiological signals into one or more processing circuits each configured to assess at least one physiological parameter based on the physiological signals by filtering said physiological signals into separate frequency domains, each of the frequency domains being associated with at least one of the physiological parameters; and switching a third and fourth electrodes from the plurality of electrodes between a first mode for providing current across the measurement site of the first and second sensing electrodes and a second mode wherein current is not provided across the measurement site, wherein the first and second modes cause the first and second sensing electrodes to assess different physiological parameters.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a physiological sensor system to be worn on a subject's skin to assess one or more physiological parameters, the system comprising: first and second electrodes that measure, when in contact with the subject's skin, physiological signals indicative of the one or more physiological parameters, the output of at least one of the first and second electrodes being split into first and second processing circuits, the first processing circuit optimized for ECG signal processing, the second processing circuit optimized for bio-impedance signal processing; a third electrode and a fourth electrode that may concurrently (i) independently provide a voltage reference, and (ii) together provide a signal for said first and second electrodes; and a subject-securing device for securing said first, second, third and fourth electrodes against the subject's skin in operation.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a multi-parameter sensor system for measuring physiological signals in a subject, the physiological signals being indicative of physiological parameters, which may in some cases be susceptible to non-signal artifacts, the system comprising a plurality of electrodes configured to concurrently provide multiple functionalities, which may in embodiments comprise of measuring at least one bioelectrical signals, reducing non-signal artifacts, providing a current source, providing a current sink, and providing a reference, the system comprising: at least a first pair of electrodes that concurrently measure at least two physiological signals indicative of at least two of the following physiological parameters: body bio-impedance, skin-electrode bio-impedance, ECG and sweat-induced characteristics; third and fourth electrodes that concurrently provide (1) a signal source for the first and second electrodes for measurement of one or more of the physiological parameters and (2) a ground for the first and second electrodes; and a subject-securing device for securing the plurality of electrodes against the subject.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a physiological sensor system to be worn on a subject's skin to measure one or more physiological parameters, the system comprising: first and second electrodes to measure, when in contact with the subject's skin, physiological signals indicative of the physiological parameters; at least one third electrode disposed in contact with the subject's skin adjacent to one of the first and second electrodes configured to concurrently (i) measure impedance between one of the third electrodes and the corresponding first or second electrode, and (ii) produce a shielding signal that is in phase with and has a voltage equal to, less than, or greater than that of said physiological signals; and a subject-securing device for securing the first, second, and third electrodes against the subject's skin in operation.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a multi-parameter sensor system for measuring physiological signals in a subject, the physiological signals being indicative of physiological parameters, the physiological signals in certain embodiments being susceptible to interference with non-signal artifacts, the system comprising a plurality of electrodes configured to concurrently provide multiple functionalities, the multiple functionalities including in some embodiments, two or more of the following: measuring at least one physiological signal, reducing non-signal artifacts, providing a current source, providing a current sink, and providing a reference, the system comprising: at least one pair of electrodes that measure physiological signals indicative of physiological parameters; third and fourth electrodes that provide a reference signal for the sensing electrodes and, in some embodiments, also provides one or both of a ground and a reference; and at least one fourth electrode adjacent to one or more of the first and second electrodes that concurrently (i) measures the impedance between the fourth electrode and the adjacent electrode and (2) is configured to drive a shielding signal, wherein said shielding signal is in phase with the sensed signal of the respective sensing electrode; and a subject-securing device for securing the first, second, third and fourth electrodes against the subject's skin.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a physiological sensor system to be worn on a subject's skin to determine one or more physiological parameters, the system comprising: at least one pair of first electrodes that measure, when in contact with the subject's skin, physiological signals indicative of the physiological parameters; and a subject-securing device for securing said measurement system against the subject's skin, said subject-securing device comprising a deformable harness to be fitted around the subject's body, and one or more substantially rigid sensor mounting modules mechanically coupled to said harness via one or more couplers, wherein said harness, when fitted around the subject's body, applies an inward force to said one or more sensor mounting modules via said one or more couplers to urge the said sensing electrodes against the subject's skin to substantially secure a position of said sensors against the subject's skin.
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a multi-parameter sensor system for measuring physiological signals in a subject, the physiological signals being indicative of physiological parameters and, in some embodiments, being susceptible to non-signal artifacts, the system comprising: at least one pair of first electrodes configured to measure physiological signals indicative of physiological parameters; a second electrode that provides a reference for the at least one pair of first electrodes; and a subject-securing device for securing the first and second electrodes against an outer surface of the subject; wherein at least one first electrode is affixed to a subject-facing side of a substantially rigid sensor mounting module to be immovably secured to a location on the outer surface of the subject by the subject-securing device.
Several embodiments of the present disclosure will be provided, by way of examples only, with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
In general, the disclosed subject matter relates to devices, systems and methods for determining one or more physiological parameters of a subject based on detected or measured physiological signals using a plurality of sensors and electrodes placed on or near the skin of the subject. Many of the plurality of sensors and electrodes are configured to provide more than one function, and in some cases, such functions are provided concurrently. Concurrently may mean that the functions are provided simultaneously, or that any of the functions are available at any given time (and can be switched therebetween as may be required), or that, at any given time, switching between the functions is of sufficient speed and/or time for provision of each function to provide the requirements of that function. As such, multiple physiological parameters can be assessed concurrently in real time and/or at any given time; additionally, the sensors or electrodes can operate to reduce interference (such as, but not limited to, non-signal artifacts from subject motion, non-signal electrical artifacts, salt-ion diffusion, static electricity, and capacitive or inductive artifacts), in some cases while concurrently providing one or more physiological parameters. As, in many cases, the physiological signals are of such low values relative to non-signal artifacts, many of the sensors or electrodes in some embodiments may concurrently provide both determining/measuring functions as well as functions relating to either the reduction of such non-signal artifacts or physiological signal detection despite non-signal artifacts. In addition, some embodiments provide for additional electrical components and/or circuit arrangements that assist in removing and/or accounting for non-signal artifacts during detection/measurement of physiological signals. As non-limiting illustrative examples, some signal buffers may be incorporated into circuitry to filter signals from specific frequency domains associated with specific physiological signals, some electrodes may divert and/or capture non-signal artifacts from measuring sensors or electrodes, some sensors or electrodes may generate a driven shield to prevent or reduce capacitive or inductive interference to measuring sensors or electrodes, and come circuit layouts may utilize differential noise filtering/isolation by splitting a signal between sensing and non-sensing electrodes (and utilizing the differential signal to remove non-signal artifacts from the sensed signal). The concurrent functionalities may also provide for reduced energy usage in some embodiments since some functionalities may be switched on or off at specific time intervals when a specific functionality, such as a measurement of a given physiological signal and/or related non-signal artifact reduction functionalities therefor may not be required at specific times. In some embodiments, the plurality of concurrent functionalities made possible by the various sensors and electrodes can be carried out utilizing a relatively small footprint that can secured to a subject with minimal discomfort and/or interference with activities or motions of such subject. Additionally, the layout and/or size and shape of the structures that are used to hold the sensors and/or electrodes in place against or near a subject minimize some non-signal artifacts; this may include, as a non-limiting illustrative examples, the securing device that holds sensors and/or electrodes against the subject so that motion between the subject and the sensor and/or electrodes is minimized, rigid or semi-rigid structures upon which sensors and/or electrodes are mounted having a shape that conforms to a subject's shape at the location where the sensors and/or electrodes contact the subject, rigid structures upon which sensors and/or electrodes are mounted having a geometry that extends beyond the sensors and/or electrodes on a subject-facing side of the rigid structures that maximize non-moving contact between such sensors and/or electrodes with the subject, and sizes and shapes of sensors and/or electrodes that minimize non-signal artifacts. In some embodiments, there is a centrally-located control module that facilitates the functionalities of each of the sensors and/or electrodes and/or circuitry and/or electrical components to provide concurrent functionality and minimize power consumption. In some such embodiments, the centrally-located control module is configured to store (in local memory) and/or transmit information related to the physiological signals or physiological parameters for use, storage and analysis to other transmitting and/or computing devices; such transmission may be provided by wired connection or non-wired connection known to persons skilled in the art (e.g. BlueTooth™).
The disclosed subject matter, therefore, according to an exemplary aspect, provides for a multi-parameter sensor system for measuring, processing and storing physiological signals in a subject. In some embodiments, the sensor system utilizes dry active and direct-surface contacting electrodes, which do not require, but can be used in association with, conducting creams or gels or other skin preparation techniques (such as abrasion or puncture). The physiological signals that are being measured by the one or more electrodes are indicative of physiological parameters, and due to their low magnitude relative to non-signal artifacts (i.e. noise), are susceptible to interference from such non-signal artifacts. The system, in one exemplary aspect, comprises a plurality of electrodes configured to provide multiple functionalities, in some cases concurrently, such functionalities including a measurement of one or more physiological signals, reducing of non-signal artifacts, providing a current source, providing a current sink, providing a reference, and combinations thereof. The system described in this embodiment further comprises: at least one pair of first electrodes that are for sensing physiological signals indicative of physiological parameters, the physiological parameters may include body bio-impedance (possibly in cases where second electrodes that are acting as reference electrodes concurrently provide a signal source by driving a signal across the body of the subject where the pair of first electrodes are located), ECG, skin-electrode impedance (possibly in cases where electrodes that act as reference electrodes are not providing a signal source), and sweat-induced bioelectrical signals (possibly when the pair of first electrodes are individually cooperating with third electrodes that operate as conducting electrodes); one or more pairs of second electrodes may concurrently provide (1) a signal source for the pair of first electrodes in their sensing of one or more of the physiological signals and (2) a reference for the pair of first electrodes; in addition, in some embodiments, the second electrodes may operate with any two or more combinations of other electrodes during measurement to provide body bio-impedance, skin-electrode bio-impedance, ECG including multi-lead, sweat sensors, acoustic sensors, light sensors, motion sensors, radiation sensors and thermal sensors; and a subject-securing device for securing the sensing electrodes and the reference electrodes against an outer surface of the subject.
In some embodiments, there is provided a sensor system for determining various physiological parameters based on the measurement of certain physiological parameters of a biological subject, which may or may not be a human. In some embodiments, there is a central management module, with which a plurality of electrodes and/or other electrical components are in electrical connection; these components are secured to a subject-securing device, such as a belt, which holds the electrodes in place against an outer surface of a subject, and depending on the connection between two or more of the available electrodes on the system to form a circuit, a portion of the circuit may comprise the subject itself, with or without a measured signal being driven therethrough. Some of the electrodes also provide or act in concert with signal sensing functionalities, and others provide other circuit structure functionalities, such as parasitic current sinks, ground, reference, signal source, current source, a driven shield (to shield from capacitive or inductive non-signal artifacts), differential noise filtering/isolation, and other functionalities. The central administration module is operative to configure the operation of the electrodes in order to provide many of these functionalities concurrently while the system is in operation and fastened, for example, around a body portion of a subject.
In some embodiments, there are provided systems comprising one or more sensing electrodes. In general, an electrode is an electrical conductor used to make contact with a nonmetallic part of a circuit; for the instantly disclosed subject matter, the non-metallic part of the circuit is the subject itself, although the system may be used to sense signals on other substrates. The sensing electrodes of the instantly disclosed systems and methods, may in general comprise a multi-parameter sensing electrode that integrates multiple separate sensing subsystems. Some sensing subsystems that are integrated in disclosed systems may share two common subject-contacting sensing electrodes; in some embodiments, such sensing electrodes are used to sense and measure physiological signals relating to, for example, such bioelectrical signals such as bio-impedance through the subject (which may utilize a separate signal current that is passed through the body of the subject at or near the sensing site by two other electrodes, in respect of which the sensing electrodes can sense characteristics of such signal to determine a body bio-impedance). In some embodiments, skin-electrode impedance is measured across the electrode to subject interface (which does not require a driven signal across the subject at the sensing location), and an ECG sensor. The ECG sensor, in general, may be a transthoracic (i.e. between different locations on the thorax or chest) interpretation of the electrical activity of the heart over a period of time, as detected by combinations of one or more electrodes attached to the surface of the skin and recorded by a device external to the electrodes, and in some cases, can be characterized as the sensing subsystem that detects and amplifies the tiny electrical changes on the skin that are caused when the heart muscle depolarizes during each heartbeat. The detection and measurement of the electrical changes on the skin may not always be required to be measured in a transthoracic fashion, and other locations on the subject body may be possible, including but not limited to the wrist, inner arm, fingers, neck, etc. In some embodiments, the body bio-impedance, skin-electrode bio-impedance, and ECG are concurrently measured by a pair of sensing electrodes, sometimes in cooperation with a pair of reference electrodes that provide a reference for the sensing electrodes and which, at times, also drive a signal current across the sensing region for body bio-impedance measurements. In general, this may be accomplished by splitting the output signal into different processing circuits; for example, a first such processing circuit is configured to filter and measure a signal for a first frequency domain in respect of which a first parameter may be characterized (e.g. ECG operates at a low frequency of around 0.1 Hz and as high as 150 Hz) and the second processing circuit is configured filter and measure a signal for a second frequency domain in respect of which a second parameter may be characterized (e.g. bio-impedance analysis, which operates at a different frequency band above about 1 KHz). The body bio-impedance and skin-electrode bio-impedance may be measured concurrently by switching on or off the driven signal across the reference electrodes. Additional physiological information of interest is often modulated on this or other signals, for example breathing effects the amplitude of ECG R-peak's as well the chest impedance and hence can be extracted by further signal processing of the acquired raw signals. In addition, any one of the sensing electrodes may operate to form a circuit with the conducting electrodes to form a sweat sensor, which can both determine the existence of sweat, as well as any sudden changes in the characteristics of sweat; both of these may be determined in some embodiments by measuring changes in in measured bio-impedance between a sensing electrode and a corresponding conducting electrode. Some such changes, based on a characteristic rate, magnitude or timing of such change, can be associated with the appearance of sweat on the surface of the skin between the sensing and conducting electrodes; and some such changes can be associated to changes in sweat characteristics based on other types of changes related to a physiological change in the subject relating to, for example, a change in health, activity, motion, or other status of the subject.
In some embodiments, there may be sensors and electrodes; in some cases, a sensor may be an electrode if such electrode is utilized for sensing bio-electrical signals which are used in determining physiological signals. In some cases, a sensor may not necessarily be an electrode since, for example, it may be utilized to measure other types of physiological signals, such as may be the case for, in some exemplary embodiments, light sensors and/or accelerometers and/or temperature sensors and/or acoustical sensors.
In some embodiments, there is provided a multi-parameter electrode that integrates multiple separate sensing subsystems and which shares common electrode-subject contact sensor components. With reference to
In some embodiments, the diameter of the sensing electrode is configured to be sufficiently large to both ensure that an area large enough for signal collection is maintained in non-moving (or motion-minimized) contact while maximizing the distance from such signal collection area from the edge of the sensing electrode (and/or buffering region edge). In some embodiments, the size of such sensing electrode is at least 0.5 cm; in other cases, it is at least 1.0 cm. Different sized sensing electrodes may be removably attached, as for example by removably attaching different types of mounting modules that have different sensing and other types of electrodes and sensors which have different sizes or characteristics, so that different sized electrodes that are most or more appropriate for the activity and/or subject can be switched onto the system; in this case most or more appropriate means that non-signal electrical artifacts are avoided or eliminated optimally, since some subjects and/or activities and/or locations can induce differing levels of non-signal electrical artifacts. The side elevation cross-sectional view in
There are provided in some embodiments, conducting electrodes which may concurrently act as electrodes in a bioelectrical signal analysis circuit (e.g. in the detection and analysis of sweat), as a conductor for the generation of a driven shield (in which the conducting electrode, through the use of feedback circuit, possibly with amplifier, is driven with a current that has the same phase and, in some cases, the same or greater voltage). This signal is driven through the conducting electrode near the sensing electrode. This reduces capacitive effects on the sensing electrodes from surrounding structures, which would otherwise result in non-signal artifacts acting on the sensed signal. In some embodiments, the driven shield is restricted to the conducting electrode at the subject-facing surface, but it may be applied back through the sensor mounting module, and connected to circuitry to reduce any such capacitive effect all the way back to the central management module. In addition, the conductive electrode may be, with or without a resistor, connected to a ground, thereby drawing parasitic current away from the sensing electrode, which could otherwise generate non-signal artifacts.
In some embodiments, one or more of the electrodes which, either alone or in concert with other components, provide signal sensing functionalities are utilized in a manner to reduce or minimize the contribution of non-signal electrical artifacts from interfering with the signal. In some cases, this reduction or minimization results from the physical arrangement of the system, in some cases it results from the configuration of electrical components within the one or more circuits relating to the measurement of the physiological signals, in some cases it results from the analysis and management of the physiological signals themselves, and in some cases it results from a combination thereof. For example, some sensing electrodes are located on a subject-facing side of a rigid or substantially rigid mounting apparatus, which in some embodiments, also includes a buffer zone around the perimeter of the sensing electrode, which ensures a non-slipping and persistent contact with a flexible surface, whose movements relative to the surface of the subject may induce electrical signals or currents that would result in non-signal artifacts that the system would not be able to distinguish from one or more physiological signals. In some cases, the physical arrangement may also include a moveable and/or pivotable and/or articulable connection element that cooperates with a connection element on the subject-securing device to decouple motion on the subject-securing device and/or the subject, from motion on the mounting apparatus at the sensing site of the respective electrode on that mounting apparatus. Indeed, the flexible and/or elastic features of the subject-securing device also contribute to the decoupling of motion to the sensing site. In other cases, the physical shape, geometry, respective sensor or electrode feature ratios, and proximity to other sensors or components (both electrical and non-electrical) of the various electrodes also contribute to the ability to protect the signal from non-signal artifacts; these include the relatively (to the adjacent conducting electrode) large circular shape of the sensing electrode, which permits sufficient current between the skin of the subject and the sensing electrode while minimizing the effect of the edge effects of that electrode due to the distance between the edge and the central region thereof. In addition, the relative close proximity of the conducting electrode permits the attraction of non-signal and parasitic current by permitting a desirable route for such current when in proximity to the surrounding region and regions proximal to the measurement sensor edges. In addition, since the electrical connections of the multiple measurement sensors, conductive electrodes, and reference electrodes may be managed by the management module, it is possible to utilize differential signal measurements across different circuits or through different electrical components to distinguish between and/or isolate non-signal artifacts. It should be noted that different sizes of the respective electrodes may be used in some subjects that balance these competing objectives differently. For example, different sized sensing electrodes and reference electrodes may be used on subjects of small size (e.g. infants) than on subjects of much larger and different compositions (e.g. adults, large mammals such as farm animals).
In some embodiments, a sensed physiological signal can be an input that is split into signal sensing modules or subsystems that measure or analyze different aspects of the signal to be able to simultaneously determine multiple physiological parameters. For example, a signal may be split and utilizing buffer amplifiers and/or filters, an assessment of different aspects of the signal which exist in different frequency domains can be made, for example ECG, which signal operates at a relatively low frequency domain, and bio-impedance, which operates at a relatively high frequency domain, can each be measured in the respective splits of the signal. In cases where only one of these measurements is required, the split to the non-required measurement can be switched off to conserve power. In some embodiments, there may be a switch to divert the signal to the appropriate electrical component that is optimized for the desired measurement; in some cases, the switching can occur at a rate so that the measurements are perceived to be simultaneous. In the latter case, other aspects or electrode characteristics (or indeed the switching rate) may be adjusted or optimized in order to minimize the non-signal artifacts that may be generated by the switching. In some cases, where both of the physiological parameters may not be required, one or more electrical components may be switched off to reduce power consumption.
In some embodiments, the sensor system may comprise sensing electrodes wherein an output of at least one pair of sensing electrodes is split into a first and second buffer amplifier, the first buffer amplifier being optimized for ECG signal buffering and the second buffer amplifier optimized for bio-impedance signal buffering, the output of each being coupled to a switching circuit for selectively coupling either the ECG or bio-impedance output signal to pass through to a dual processing circuit which can be used to calculate either bio-impedance or ECG depending on which buffer the switch is connected to; in some cases, the dual processing circuit can selectively calculate the respective parameter by selectively assessing frequency bands associated with the frequency band associated with the respective parameter; for example, bio-impedance is measured from a higher frequency signal (˜1 KHz) and ECG signals are measured at lower frequencies (˜0.5 Hz to 150 Hz). In cases where measurements in the dual processing circuit consumes differential amounts of power depending on how many and which frequency bands are being assessed, the dual processing circuit may be configured to selectively process only a single frequency band, particularly with a preference for processing the frequency band that utilizes less power.
In other embodiments, a signal output of one or both of a pair of sensing electrodes may comprise an output that is an input to a single buffer amplifier optimized for both ECG and bio-impedance signal buffering, the output of the buffer amplifier being split into first and second processing circuits, the first processing circuit optimized for ECG signal processing, by filtering for the ECG frequency band at <−150 Hz, the second processing circuit optimized for bio-impedance signal processing by filtering for the bio-impedance frequency band at >−1 KHz.
In some embodiments, both electrodes of at least one pair of sensing electrodes are each coupled to a buffer in close proximity to the respective electrode, so as to minimize non-signal artifacts (e.g. parasitic currents), with the output of each buffer being split, a first split from each buffer being combined into a differential input of an ECG signal processing circuit, and a second split from each buffer being combined into a differential input of a bio-impedance signal processing circuit. The differential signal inputs into the respective signal processing circuits can provide for noise detection, measurement, isolation, and removal of such detected or isolated noise and/or other non-signal artifact from any calculations/measurements of the physiological signal.
In some embodiments, the use of distributed reference electrodes can be implemented. These may or may not be located on the mounting apparatus, and in some embodiments are woven directly in to the fabric on the subject-facing side of the subject-securing device. The reference electrodes can, in addition to providing a reference for sensing electrodes and/or sensors, simultaneously provide a distributed ground for some circuits (or bio-electrical signal measurement subsystem), and can provide current injection in another (or for the same circuit at different times). It should be noted, however, that other electrodes can provide a ground reference or reference signal for any other electrode/subsystem, and the use of the term reference electrodes may be used to refer to any such electrodes in the system. For some embodiments, the ground and reference electrodes may be the same, while in others, the ground electrode may be from a different electrode than from reference electrode and with different impedance values. Moreover, a sensing electrode and/or a conductive electrode in one operational configuration, may serve as a reference or ground electrode in another operational configuration at a different time, as determined by the control module. Since typical impedance for a ground electrode should be less than 500 kΩ, in order to reduce power line and/or static noise, some embodiments may be used to increase surface area of dry ground electrode and/or to wet skin with body lotion to provide a better noise dissipation. In embodiments, the woven conductive fabric, which is highly flexible, may be used on the subject facing side of the subject-securing device to increase the surface area of the ground electrode at all times on a region of contact. In some embodiments, a resistor is included in a circuit structure between a reference electrode and the signal ground, which results in current passing across or through the subject through to the other reference electrode and into its respective signal ground, thereby permitting the reference electrodes to concurrently act as both signal grounds, reference electrodes and a source of current.
In some embodiments, the first and second reference electrodes are electrically connected to a ground signal, wherein there is a resistor between one of the reference electrodes and a first ground signal and the second reference electrode is electrically connection directly to a second signal ground. This, in embodiments permits the pair of reference electrodes to concurrently dissipate static and other noise artifacts, as well as act as a ground reference when a BIA AC source current is injected into the body using the electrode with the contained resistor; the AC signal is isolated from the ground signal if the body impedance at the injected AC frequency is lower than the resistor impedance. The resistor may, in embodiments, be between 20 kΩ and 500 kΩ.
In some embodiments, there are one or more conductive electrodes which are located adjacent to corresponding sensing electrodes. Conductive electrodes may be, in some embodiments, located around an outer perimeter of sensing electrodes or portions thereof; in some embodiments, the conductive electrodes may form a complete or partial ring around the sensing electrode. This conductive electrode may provide one or more different functionalities in some embodiments. The surface of the conductive electrode may provide for a physical buffering region ring around the sensing electrode that provides for additional immovable contact at the sensing electrode by assisting to immobilize the sensing electrode relative to the surface of the subject; this physical buffering region ring around the sensing electrode (which may comprise of either an electrode, such as the conductive electrode, or a non-electrode physical structure) may minimize the effects of motion and pressure on the sensed signal at the sensing electrode by limiting deformation and pressure changes at the interior of the mounting apparatus, particularly when in cooperative use with the subject-securing device. The conductive electrode may also be driven with a signal that is in-phase with a sensed signal collected by an associated sensing electrode, in some embodiments using a feedback circuit structure with or without a voltage amplifier; the conductive electrode therefore reduces capacitive or inductive effects on the sensing electrode that may be caused by non-signal artifacts. The conductive electrode may operate as an electrode in a circuit with the corresponding sensing electrode; a measurement of bio-impedance therebetween, and in some cases a change in such bio-impedance of a particular magnitude, can be indicative of the existence of sweat, and moreover, further changes in such bio-impedance after the existence of sweat has been determined may further indicate a change in certain physiological conditions (e.g. aerobic vs. anaerobic exercise, shock, immobility, etc.) and/or the occurrence of an adverse health event (e.g. a stroke or heart attack, etc.).
In some embodiments, the subject-securing device is the component that holds many of the elements of the system together, as well as to urge the close and substantially immovable contact against the subject. In some embodiments, the subject-securing device may comprise a strap or other securable band that is removably placeable around a body portion of the subject. It may be a flexible, elastic device for placing around a portion of a subject, or it may comprise other mechanical means that forcibly clamp on to or squeeze against a portion of a subject. Alternatively, all or portions of the subject facing side of the subject securing device may comprise adhesive for being securely placed or urged against a subject. Combinations of these or other securing methodologies can be used without departing from the scope and nature of the instantly disclosed subject matter. In an exemplary embodiment, there is provided a flexible, elastic subject-securing device for securing the system to a subject, such as a chest belt. The coupling of the electrodes to the subject-securing device isolates the electrode-body interface from electrode-subject-securing device attachment, and minimizes effects such as stretching, pressure, limb movements, etc. of the subject-securing device which may otherwise cause the electrodes to move relative to the subject and thus cause non-signal artifacts from such motion. In embodiments, portions of the contact region of the subject-facing portion of the subject-securing device can be rendered conductive (e.g. by using woven electrically conductive fabric in the subject-securing device), and electrically connected to the central management module, and thereby can additionally provide means for electrical path between the electrode and other functions on the belt, such as separate pieces of electronics or other electrodes.
In embodiments, there is provided a coupler for attaching the sensing mounting apparatus to the subject-securing device; in some cases, the coupler is conductive in order to provide both a point of connection and maintain electrical connection of the one or more circuits including electrodes on that sensor mounting module. In embodiments where the coupler is articulable (including movable, pivotable, and rotatable) in order to decouple the sensor mounting module from the subject-securing device while maintaining an electrical connection, the coupler may be conductive in order to provide both a point of electrical contact and the coupling function. If conductive, the coupler may provide for one or more connections. In some cases, an alternative electrical connection can be used, which use an articulable coupler, such as a separate bendable or deformable wire. Couplers such as snaps, rivets, glue and thread made of conductive materials are examples conductive and non-conductive coupler types. Items such as Velcro, sticky tape, glue, thread are examples of other conductive or non-conductive means. The subject-securing device may in some embodiments provide protection or cushioning for the subject-facing side of the electrode from motion, pressure and temperature effects. Shielding materials could also be in the belt above the electrodes to provide shielding effects if required (e.g. from RF sources such as cell phones, wireless transmitters, microwave ovens, etc. that can contribute non-signal artifacts).
The subject-securing device may also in some embodiments provide a small contact region for fixing the sensor mounting module or other electrode thereto. The single point of contact allows the electrode position to be fixed in the horizontal and vertical directions on the body of the subject and for the application of vertical pressure through the securing device-electrode contact region and through the neighboring regions where the freely moving subject-securing device presses onto the backside region non-skin surface of the electrode. By making the contact region small and by having some adjustability in the connection, provided for example by a moveable coupler, such as a ball-and-socket type of snap, non-signal artifacts from unwanted belt motion can be isolated from the electrode. In addition, this allows the subject-securing device to stretch and bend and twist, providing for solid and comfortable attachment to the body with minimal transfer of the effects of subject-securing device motion into the attached electrodes or sensor mounting module, including (and in some cases particularly) the motion relative to the subject.
In some embodiments, some or all of the electrodes may be attached to a sensor mounting module. The sensor mounting module is a rigid, or substantially rigid mounting component wherein one or more electrodes are attached to a subject-facing side. The sensor mounting module is further configured to be attached to the subject-securing device such that the sensor mounting module is pushed, held or urged against the skin or outer surface of a subject's body or part thereof. The mounting module provides a rigid surface, upon which one or more sensors are affixed, that conforms to a sensing site of a subject (or causes a non-rigid surface, such as skin, to conform to the surface of the sensing site). As such, with the force or pressure against the subject provided by the subject-securing device, there is a location in the central region of the subject-facing surface that is substantially immovably secure against the sensing site, irrespective of movement along such surface or in the subject-securing device. Moreover, an increase in force along the interface of the mounting module and the surface of the subject will be mainly directed at the edges of the mounting module. In some embodiments, there is provided a buffering region between the outermost peripheries of one or more electrodes affixed to the sensor mounting module which further protects the electrode from motion effects relative to the contacting surface. A solid (e.g. PCB, metal, plastic, silicon, glass) or semi solid (e.g. mylar, plastic, rubber, coated paper) material that provides direct contact to skin can form the bulk material of the sensor mounting module. The size, shape, materials can be of a wide range, but in general the size of the platform will be greater than or equal to the minimum sensor surface area. In the case of ECG and bio-impedance sensing in the chest region of an adult human this would be in the order 2 cm2 or larger. The back side (non-skin contact side) or interior of the sensor mounting module can be used to house sensor electronics, mechanical, electrical and RF isolation mechanisms, buffers, subject-securing device attachment, other sensors and sensor-related devices (e.g. acoustical, light source and light sensors), heating elements, and electrical interconnect mechanisms. The sensor mounting module can provide solid, stable electrical, thermal and mechanical contact to skin surface and an area on which electronics can be mounted on non-skin side of platform. It may also help to reduce skin deformation effects such as voltage, current and thermal gradients caused by movement at the electrode-body boundary (for example due to motion artifact, pressure). The sensor mounting module may also provide in some embodiments more uniform electrical and thermal patterns on the entire surface of the electrode, as well as for integration of one or more sensing types and features on the rigid platform, and reduces the need for gels, moisture, skin abrasion or micro-needles to stabilize electrode-body contact effects.
The sensing module may also provide an electrode deformation buffering region around each electrode. A solid or semi-solid regions formed by the sensor mounting module is provided on some embodiments surrounding one or more electrodes. With reference to
With reference now to
In some embodiments, a sensor mounting module may comprise of additional sensors, such as an acoustic sensor, a light source with light sensor, a motion sensor such as an accelerometer and a thermal sensor. The acoustic sensor may, in embodiments, comprise a flexible diaphragm as input window of microphone imbedded into body of sensor mounting module, having a frequency band of approximately 20 to 1000 Hz; the acoustical sensor can thus measure or detect pulse, breathing rate, heart rate, or any other activity in the subject that creates or results in noise. Some acoustic sensors may comprise a piezoelectric microphone. The light source (e.g. a light emitting diode) emits light at one or more wavelengths and reflected off the adjacent skin, and depending on the absorption of particular wavelengths, as detected by the light sensor (e.g. photodetector, photodiode, or other light sensor known to a person skilled in the art), certain characteristics of the blood can be determined, such as pulse oximetry and SpO2 (oxygen saturation).
In embodiments with a thermal sensor, there are provided configurations with thermal sensors place in close proximity to the back side of an electrode that may be used for another purpose (e.g. a sensing electrode, a conductor electrode, or reference electrode, or other), wherein the sensing electrode is made of material that is both highly electrically and thermally conductive. In some embodiments, where additional thermal conductivity is desired, the electrode may have introduced therein as one or more plugs extending from the subject-facing side to the back side of such electrode, highly thermally conductive material, which will assist in ensuring that as an accurate measurement as possible can be made. With reference to
In accordance with another exemplary aspect of the disclosed subject matter, there is provided a method of concurrently measuring two or more physiological parameters from a subject using a same pair of sensing electrodes and an associated pair of grounding reference electrodes, each in contact with the subject's skin to define a measurement site therebetween, the method comprising: collecting physiological signals via said pair of sensing electrodes; splitting said collected physiological signals in accordance with distinct frequency domains respectively associated with each of the distinct physiological parameters; and switching the reference electrodes between an active mode in which a current is provided across the measurement site and a passive mode in which said current is not provided, wherein said active mode and said passive mode cause the sensing electrodes to assess respective ones of said distinct physiological parameters. By switching from the active mode, in which a signal is driven across the location of the pair of sensing electrodes, to a passive mode, in which the driven signal is not present, the sensing electrodes can concurrently provide body and skin-electrode bio-impedance. Although in some embodiments this may not be strictly simultaneous at all times, each of the respective parameters can be measured at any given time by cycling quickly between these modes, and depending on the length of the cycle between active and passive modes, the measured results can be provided quasi-simultaneously since they are measured successively with a reduced time interval between such measurements, in some cases in alternating fashion.
In some embodiments, in addition to methods that provide for concurrent measurement functionalities, by virtue of the reference electrodes acting as a driven signal concurrently while providing a reference signal and/or a ground signal, the conductive electrodes can also provide concurrent functionalities. Such methods will provide for concurrent use of the conductive electrode in providing multiple functionalities: a driven shield, a measurement electrode along with the corresponding sensing electrode to act as a sweat sensor, and a current sink for parasitic current and/or noise during operation of the sensing electrode. In some embodiments, the conducting electrode is switched between modes to provide concurrent functionalities; in other embodiments, two or more of these functionalities may be provided simultaneously. In some embodiments, concurrent use of the sensing electrodes to measure both bio-impedance (including either or both body and skin-electrode types) and ECG is provided; either by a step of switching an output signal between buffer amplifier components which are each optimized for each parameter and then passing the outputs thereof to a respective signal processing unit appropriate for the frequency band of the parameter being measured. In some embodiments, the signal is split and therefore there is possibly simultaneous measurement of different parameters in different signal processing units.
There are provided in the instantly disclosed subject matter systems comprising electrodes, each of which concurrently provides two or more functionalities. The functionalities may include: concurrent measurement of multiple parameters; concurrent measurement of one or more parameters with the provision of one or more of a signal current, current sink or source, a ground signal, a reference signal, and a driven shield; or the concurrent provision of two or more of a signal current, current sink or source, a ground signal, a reference signal, and a driven shield. In some embodiments, any one or more of the sensing electrodes, the reference electrodes, or the conductive electrodes, or a combination thereof may provide concurrent functionality. As such, in some embodiments, there is provided a physiological sensor system to be worn on a subject's skin to measure one or more physiological parameters, the system comprising at least one pair of sensing electrodes that measure, when in contact with the subject's skin, physiological signals indicative of the one or more physiological parameters, the output of one sensing electrode of each pair being split into first and second processing circuits, the first processing circuit optimized for ECG signal processing, the second processing circuit optimized for bio-impedance signal processing, and a subject-securing device for securing said sensing electrodes and said first and second reference electrodes against the subject's skin in operation. The other electrodes (e.g. reference electrodes and conducting electrodes), if they are present at all, need not provide multiple concurrent functionalities in this embodiment. In embodiments, the first and second reference electrodes may provide only a source signal for said sensing electrodes in their measurement of the physiological parameters; they may only provide a reference signal, or a ground signal; and in some embodiments, they may provide all or some combination of these functionalities concurrently (along with the concurrent measurement functionalities at the sensing electrodes). In some embodiments, some electrodes may provide a sensing function and concurrently provide functionality as a ground, reference, or driven shield. In some embodiments, reference electrodes may act as noise (i.e. non-signal artifacts) attenuators that remove parasitic current; in some such cases, the reference sensors may act by drawing non-signal artifacts away from sensing electrodes (and their respective circuits).
As used herein, the term “concurrent”, with respect to two or measurements or modes, may mean simultaneous (i.e. the measurements or modes are made at the same or overlapping times) or it may mean the measurements are taken, or the modes are in existence, at different discrete intervals that are sufficiently close enough in time within a specific time period such that measurements or modes can be deemed to the same as if the measurements were taken or the modes existed at the same time. The latter may be associated with a rapid and repeated switching between measurements or modes, but it need not be repeated. In some cases, concurrent may refer to the ability to be in, or to take, any one or more of a plurality of modes, or measurements respectively, at any given time.
Some physiological signals may be determined by detecting and/or measuring any of a wide number of bioelectrical parameters known to persons skilled in the art, including voltage, current, frequency, resistance, impedance, reactance, capacitance, inductance, phase angle, or any other electrical characteristics which can be measured, calculated and estimated in respect of an electrical current or signal. In other cases, the physiological signals may refer to light, acceleration, noise, temperature, or other parameters relating to a subject that may, for example, be measured by sensors included in embodiments hereof.
With reference to
Each of the electrodes 132, 121, 120, 124, 125, 130 (as well as the optical and temperature and other possible electrodes that are not shown) are electrically coupled to the control module 110. The control module 110 can configure the connections between the electrodes to form bi-polar and multi-polar circuits using any combination of two or more electrodes. In addition, any of the electrodes can be used to concurrently do two or more of the following: act as a current source, act as a current sink, perform measurement, or signal protection/non-signal artifact reduction activities.
The shield conductor electrodes 121, 125 may, operate as either measuring sensors or as conductors for providing a driven shield around each of the first sensing electrodes. In embodiments, the circuit formed by the first sensing electrode 120 and the shield conductor electrode 121 measures certain electrical characteristics in the space therebetween and can thus be used as a sweat sensor. Changes in the electrical characteristics in that circuit can indicate the existence of sweat between the sensors, or changes in characteristics of the sweat that may be indicative of certain physiological changes in the subject.
In embodiments, one of the first measurement sensors 120 to other first measurement sensor 124, there is provided a circuit (a portion of which comprises the subject (not shown)) which includes circuit elements for providing ECG and bio-impedance measurement (not shown). In a four sensor configuration, the system 100 uses the reference electrodes 130, 132 to supply current across the measurement sight during the measurement of body bio-impedance across the two first sensing electrodes 120, 124. In some cases, there is a two sensor bio-impedance measurement, which is used to determined skin impedance or in some cases bio-impedance at or near the surface of the subject. In either case, and for ECG measurement, sweat measurement, as well as other measurements involving any of the other sensors, the outer electrodes also act as reference electrodes and/or ground. In some embodiments, the reference electrodes can provide a source of current from reference electrode 130 to reference electrode 132. In some cases, the reference electrodes can provide a source of current, but can still provide a signal ground for any one or more of the possible circuits by placing a resistor in one reference that is electrically connect to a current source, such that current will go to the signal ground at that reference sensor but also, due to the resistor, pass through the subject to ground at the other reference sensor. The configuration shown in
In some embodiments, this dual capability of acting as both ground and current source for bio-impedance measurement is provided for by having a resistor on one reference electrode that is “near” or closer to a current source, which ensures that the current flows through measurement site rather than sinking straight to ground at the “near” electrode and can also sink to ground at the other reference electrode, and such current then provides a source signal for bio-impedance measurements between such reference electrodes.
The shield conductor electrode surrounds the primary electrode and is driven at same voltage phase to protect the signal in primary, but also may operate in a second mode where impedance is measured thereacross to measure the existence of sweat and also the change conditions of the sweat therein. In some embodiments, the surrounding conductor electrode may also be connected to ground in order to draw away non-signal parasitic electrical currents from the nearby primary electrode.
The sensor mounting modules 112, 114 or the subject-securing device 140 may also contain an optical sensor, which may comprise a light source, and a light sensing electrode, which in some embodiment may be a photodiode. In some embodiments, there is provided a temperature electrode, which in some embodiments may be a thermocouple placed on the opposing side of each of the first sensing electrodes 120, 124; in embodiments with a temperature electrode, there may be provide temperature conducting elements that provide high temperature conductivity through the first sensing electrodes 120, 124.
Some embodiments may be characterized as a system of electrodes for measuring physiological signals across a living organism, the physiological signals being indicative of a plurality of bio-electricity-based characteristics, the electrodes being specifically configured to simultaneously measure a plurality of such electrical signals, some of such physiological signal having very low electrical signals (potential and current), while eliminating, filtering, measuring, or otherwise accounting for any contribution of such signals from other sources during measurement. This capability to simultaneously measure a plurality of reduced strength signals, while accounting for the artifact signal, may be based on a number of functional aspects, some of which may include but are not limited to the following (wherein such list is not intended to be a comprehensive enumeration of aspects, requirements, or objectives, as these aspects may not be present in all cases and other aspects may be possible):
A driven shield may in some embodiments, seek to match a signal between the sensing electrode and another adjacent component, thus making the parasitic capacitance being virtually nonexistent. A driven shield may be positioned roughly around the sides of the electrode and fed with a signal that is in phase with the signal that is sensed at the electrode. Since the shield and the electrode voltages are in-phase, capacitance between the two, as well as the electrode and all components positioned behind the shield, have reduced effect on the operation of the sensor.
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Integrating the multiple sensors into a single sensing platform offers many advantages including allowing for coordinated measurement with various sensing subsystems thereby reducing or eliminating the interaction between the subsystems; reducing the physical space requirements for placing the multiple electrodes on the body; reducing the back end sensing electronics, and cables and packaging materials. As such, in addition to providing multi-parameter assessment and non-signal artifact reduction, the overall footprint of the device is minimized and power reduction methodologies can be implemented when measuring some or all parameters.
With reference to
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and so Signal Gain approaches 1 as Ri>>Rs, where Ri is the resistance of resistor 1203 and Rs is the resistance of resistor 1204. As can be seen in
where ωc is the noise coupling and Cc is a constant; a large Ri results in a decreasing ωc for the circuit of
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An ECG subsystem in embodiments is used to pick up passive cardiac voltage potentials between an electrode on a first sensing electrode and a second sensing electrode. The raw cardiac signal is processed to determine the occurrence of R-peak. Most of the QRS complex spectrum is in the 5-30 Hz range and the ECG signal is very small, typically 4 my or less. The primary function of the circuit is to isolate the QRS complex, filter out noise, especially 50/60 Hz noise and amplify the ECG signal to a range that can be properly captured by an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) in the data acquisition subsystem. The signal is typically sampled at a rate of approximately 100 samples per second or higher. The data acquisition sub-system extracts the following data from the ECG subsystem:
The ECG data acquisition process may in some embodiments be designed to operate concurrently with the bio-impedance, sweat-sensor and optical/thermal/acoustic/motion data acquisition processes so that these processes can be run independently or synchronized with the ECG R-peak. The electrodes on some embodiments are permanently connected to the ECG subsystem therefore it is not necessary for the cross point switch to connect the electrodes to the ECG. Configurations without permanent ECG connections may require the electrodes to be connected to the ECG subsystem. A single ECG sample is acquired and groomed using a digital filter to be used in the R-peak search algorithm. See Friesen et al. (“A comparison of the noise sensitivity of nine QRS detection algorithms”) for a description of nine different peak search algorithms. If an R-peak is found then a time stamp is taken for use by the bio-impedance, sweat-sensor and optical/thermal/acoustic data acquisition processes for synchronization.
In some embodiments, bio-impedance is defined herein to cover the frequency range from 0 Hz to 10 MHz and RF is defined herein to cover the range from 10 MHz and higher. The bio-impedance sub-system may be used to inject alternating current into the body between electrodes on two separate sensor modules. Preferably the source supplies less than 1 mA (for safety) of sinusoidal current at several frequencies in the range of 1 Hz to 100 kHz and less than 10 mA in the range above 100 kHz. The bio-impedance subsystem measures the complex impedance across the body (between electrodes in separate sensor modules or across the local body part (between electrodes within a single sensor module). Different current levels and periodic waveforms can be used to perform a similar bio-impedance function. The resultant phase and magnitude information from the bio-impedance block is sampled by the data acquisition system so that it can be used by the signal processing function to calculate body composition information such as local and body water content, local and body electrolyte content and local and body fat content etc.
In some embodiments, the bio-impedance circuit can be connected to electrodes simultaneously with the ECG sub-system. This allows the signal processing function to use the ECG R-Peak to synchronize the bio-impedance measurements to improve the bio-impedance signal processing by focusing the processing to a specific interval in the cardiac period. The bio-impedance analysis sub-system measures the complex impedance across the body or across a local tissue area. One method of determining complex impedance is using the theory of AC phasors. By injecting a sinusoidal waveform into the body the magnitude of the complex impedance can be determined and the phase angle can be determined using a phase detector.
I
Body
=V
Tx
/R
S
|ZBody|=VRx/Ibody
The phase shift (ΦRX) of the injected signal with respect to the received signal can be measured using a phase detector. The real and imaginary parts of the complex impedance can be determined using the following formula:
Z Body=|Z Body|<φRX=R+jX=|ZBody|cos(φRX)+j|ZBody|sin(φRX)
The body impedance is derived from the current and voltage drop across the body. A constant current source could be used for the measurement eliminating the need to measure the current. However, in this embodiment, a measured current method is used. This method requires an additional ADC to measure the voltage drop across a reference resistor to derive the injected current. Phase can be extracted using a phase detector and is acquired through an ADC.
In some embodiments, the device may acquire at least all or part of the following data during a fixed acquisition period:
The above examples illustrate certain types of processing which can be done for a single BIA frequencies time series of acquired data. There are additional ways the data can be processed, e.g. in time domain, frequency domain, at separate BIA frequencies, interrelationships and/or combinations between multiple signals or derived signals (like ECG used to synchronize BIA processing periods as discussed in this example).
Bio-impedance can also be measured locally between electrodes in a single sensor module. The complex impedance information is used to derive local water, electrolyte and fat information. The voltage drop across the local tissue (VRX) is measured through a second set of electrodes (e.g. the conductive electrodes). The electrode resistances (RE) do not affect the voltage measurement since the high input impedance of the magnitude and phase detectors draws virtually no current.
An alternative process for acquiring the bio-impedance data for local (single module) and body (multi module) measurements at a number of frequencies. First the bio-impedance electrode pairs are selected and an AC current is injected into the tissue. The injected signal is recovered and the tissue complex impedance is derived from the raw voltage, current and phase shift measurements (using ohm's law). Instantaneous and average complex impedance is recorded. Then the rate of change of the complex impedance (dZ/dt) is computed to find the maximum rate of change (max (dZ/dt)) and the time interval from R-peak to max (dZ/dt) (if R-peak synchronization is used). These values are recorded for use in the final data processing algorithms. If R-peak synchronization is used then the dZ/dt, max (dZ/dt) and timing measurements calculations are skipped unless the sample is taken during the desired time interval from R-peak. The acquisition process is repeated for each frequency and set of electrodes. The bio-impedance subsystem must wait for the injected signals to stabilize before making measurements, which makes it difficult to switch rapidly to and from the bio-impedance subsystem. For this reason the bio-impedance data acquisition process may be given an appropriate time slice to complete all of its measurements.
In some embodiments, a buffer amplifier is an electrical component that provides electrical impedance transformation from one circuit to another. Two main types of buffer exist: the voltage buffer and the current buffer. Typically a current buffer amplifier is used to transfer a current from a first circuit, having a low output impedance level, to a second circuit with a high input impedance level. The interposed buffer amplifier prevents the second circuit from loading the first circuit unacceptably and interfering with its desired operation. In the ideal current buffer in the diagram, the input impedance is zero and the output impedance is infinite (impedance of an ideal current source is infinite). Again, other properties of the ideal buffer are: perfect linearity, regardless of signal amplitudes; and instant output response, regardless of the speed of the input signal. For buffer amplifiers of the instantly disclosed subject matter, if the current is transferred unchanged (the current gain βi is 1), the amplifier is again a unity gain buffer; this time known as a current follower because the output current follows or tracks the input current. In some embodiments, a buffer may comprise sub-buffers; each sub-buffer may comprise one or more sub-buffers, in series, in parallel or both.
With reference to
While the present disclosure describes various exemplary embodiments, the disclosure is not so limited. To the contrary, the disclosure is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the general scope of the present disclosure.
The presently disclosed subject matter is a continuation of and claims the benefit of PCT/CA2015/050598, filed Jun. 26, 2015, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/017,523, filed Jun. 26, 2014, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62017523 | Jun 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/CA2015/050598 | Jun 2015 | US |
Child | 15390315 | US |