The invention is in the medical field, and more specifically cardiac medicine.
It is well known in medicine that as the heart starts failing the water retention in body tissues goes up. It was previously shown that monitoring this water retention is a good diagnostic tool for predicting heart failure. Heart failure may take a long time to develop and the cost of monitoring the patients, in order to determine when intervention is needed, is high. The advantage of monitoring the status of the cardiac system by water retention in the body is the ability to perform the test at home, without help from medical personnel. Previous attempts to use at-home monitoring were mainly based on the weight of the patient. Such a method is inaccurate as rapid weight gain (from overeating) will have the same symptoms as water retention and weight loss can mask the effect of water retention. It is desired to have a low cost and simple to use system that measures the water contents of the body directly, without being affected by the shape or weight of the body and without requiring calibration to a specific person.
Prior art devices for measuring water retention by electrical methods are based on impedance measurement, single sided capacitance measurements or optical measurement. Impedance methods require good electrical contact with the skin, using a special paste, similar to EKG electrodes, and are not suitable for home use. Single sided (i.e. both electrodes on the same side of the tissue) capacitance measurements, such as US patent application 20050177061, are inaccurate as the electric field single sided electrodes generate is non-uniform. For example if a fatty tissue is near the skin and a muscle is below the fatty tissue the reading will be different than when the muscle is above the fatty tissue. In a more uniform electric field, as created by a parallel plate capacitor, the order of the layers will not affect the reading.
Single sided optical measurements, or even through-the tissue optical measurement are hard to perform accurately since the optical properties do not change much with the water contents. This can be seen in FIGS. 8A, 8B and 8C of US patent application 20080220512. One object of the invention is to create a low cost and simple device that can be used by non-medical personnel, even at home, and will not require calibration for a specific body location or person. A further object is to make the measurement unaffected by skin resistance, by using the capacitive part of the impedance rather the resistive part. Since water has a very high dielectric constant (over 80) compared to other tissue components, the dielectric constant mainly reflects the water contents of the tissue.
The water contents of the tissue is measured by placing part of the body, such as the arm or ankle, between two capacitive electrodes and calculating the water contents based on the dielectric properties of the tissue. The device is shaped like a bracelet or hinged clip. When placed over part of the body the hinge position is measured to normalize the reading for the tissue thickness. The device can alert the user of water retention, and can also contact the physician directly via a wireless link.
It is well known that the electrical properties of tissue are affected by the water contents. A suitable electrical property for monitoring water contents is the dielectric constant, also known as permittivity. The measurement can be done at a wide range of frequencies, from KHz to GHz. The range of 1 MHz to 100 MHz is particularly useful because of the ease of implementation, and in particular frequencies that fall in the unregulated ISM band, such as 6.78 MHz, 13.5 MHz or 27 MHz are convenient to use. The capacitance is measured by placing the tissue between two electrodes. The higher the water contents the higher the capacitance. The approximate dependence of the dielectric constant of tissue on the water contents is shown in
Referring now to
Electrodes 8 and 9 can be made to tilt in one or two planes in order to better fit the body part on which they are placed. A small air gap, typically below 1 mm, will not introduce a large error but if the whole area of the pad is in contact with the skin accuracy is improved. Another option is to use shallow sealed bags filled with an electrically conductive liquid or gel as electrodes. Such bags will comply and fit well any body part.
The normalized output is fed to readout unit 17 which turns on LEDs 11 as well as generating any required alarm signal 18. The alarm signal can be visible, audible, a wireless transmitter to automatically alert a physician via a mobile phone network or the Internet, or any combination of the above.
An alternate thickness compensation method is shown in
Sometimes accuracy can be improved by measuring the electrical impedance at multiple frequencies, for example 1 KHz, 100 KHz and 10 MHz. The value of the dielectric constant derived from these measurements will not be the same, as the dielectric constant, which has a real and imaginary part, is also a function of frequency. Each measurement forms an independent equation and the number of unknowns can equal the number of independent equation. Such change of electrical properties with frequency is known as dispersion and the art of measuring dispersion based on measurements at several frequencies is well known in electrical engineering. Dispersion can supply further information about the composition of the tissue. To measure dispersion oscillator 12 is set up to generate several frequencies, either sequentially or at the same time. Detector 14 measures the electrical signal at each one of those frequencies. More complete data about tissue discrimination using multiple frequencies is given in US patent application 2007/0270688, by the same inventors. This application is hereby incorporated by reference.
The device can be configured in other forms, for example in the form of a permanently worn bracelet having the two electrodes at diametrically opposed positions. The bracelet can be worn, for example, on the wrist or the ankle.
The electronic circuit can be designed to turn on for a very brief period, say one second, once per day. This will allow even a very small battery to last many years. Since the bracelet has a fixed size, thickness compensation can be eliminated by calibration. Such a design is shown in
In operation the patient simply slips the device over their arm (or other body part) daily and sees the result instantly. There is minimal time delay involved in the measurement, typically under one second. In case of a bracelet, the patient simply wears the bracelet at all times.
An alternate method of detecting heart failure is to measure the change in electrical impedance rather than the actual impedance. Any rapidly decreasing impedance signifies water retention, as the impedance decreases as the dielectric constant, reflecting water content, is increasing. By setting up a baseline from daily measurements between two electrodes, a trend can be established without knowing the absolute value of the impedance. This eliminates the need to know the tissue thickness.
While the main application of the invention is monitoring of heart failure it can be used for other medical applications such as monitoring kidney function.