The present invention relates to acoustic sensors and, more particularly, wearable physiological acoustic sensors.
Physiological acoustic sensors gather physiological sounds from the human body that can be applied to a variety of health diagnostic purposes. For example, heart and lung sounds can be used to estimate vital sign values, such as heart rate and respiration rate. Heart and lung sounds can also be used to detect a host of health problems. For example, heart sounds can be used to identify heart anomalies, such as presence of the S3, S4 sounds, splits of the Si and S2 sounds, rubs, click and heart murmurs that indicate mitral or aortic regurgitation, mitral or aortic stenosis or patent ductos arteriosus. Lung sounds can be used to identify breathing anomalies, such as wheeze, stridor, grasp, rales and crackles. Additionally, physiological acoustic sensors can detect other organ sounds of interest, such as sounds indicating the start of digestive cycles that can be used to set optimal feeding schedules for comatose patients.
Some physiological acoustic sensors, such as electronic stethoscopes, gather physiological sounds in episodic spot checks. These sensors are not wearable by the person being monitored and do not provide continuous, real-time monitoring of vital sign values or health diagnostics.
Other physiological acoustic sensors are mounted on the body or worn on clothing of the person being monitored. While conventional wearable sensors can provide continuous, real-time monitoring, they are often highly susceptible to impulse noise from abrupt hits, clothing scrapes and other motion-related events as well as background noise from the surrounding environment. Moreover, these conventional sensors often have a large form factor which does not keep close enough proximity between the body microphone and the body of patients to provide good body sound capture, subjects patients to discomfort and provides an intrusive presence.
The present invention provides a wearable physiological acoustic sensor having an embedded and stacked acoustic sensing component architecture that inhibits motion-related impulse noise and environmental background noise, and provides good body sound capture, good patient comfort and an unobtrusive presence. The embedded and stacked component architecture also includes an environmental microphone that enables cancellation of background noise for further noise reduction.
In one aspect of the invention, a wearable physiological acoustic sensor comprises a plaster and an acoustic sensing component assembly. The plaster has a top layer and a bottom layer. The component assembly has an acoustic sensing component housing and an acoustic sensing component stack embedded in the component housing. The component housing has a ceiling, a wall and a floor having a flange held between the top layer and the bottom layer. The component stack has a body microphone with acoustic access through an opening in the floor and an environmental microphone with acoustic access through an opening in the ceiling.
In some embodiments, the component stack has a body microphone printed circuit board.
In some embodiments, the component assembly has a lower orifice running from the body microphone through the body microphone printed circuit board providing the body microphone with acoustic access.
In some embodiments, the lower orifice runs from the body microphone to a body sound chamber disposed between the lower orifice and the floor.
In some embodiments, the component stack has an environmental microphone printed circuit board.
In some embodiments, the component assembly has an upper orifice running from the environmental microphone through the environmental microphone printed circuit board providing the environmental microphone with acoustic access.
In some embodiments, the upper orifice runs from the environmental microphone to the ceiling.
In some embodiments, the body microphone and the environmental microphone are acoustically isolated from one another.
In some embodiments, acoustic isolation tape is disposed between the body microphone and the environmental microphone.
In some embodiments, the component housing has a strain relief element projecting from the wall and the component assembly has an acoustic signal output line running through an opening in the strain relief element.
In some embodiments, the flange is snugly retained between the top layer and the bottom layer.
In some embodiments, the plaster has a preformed groove and the flange is held in the preformed groove.
In some embodiments, the bottom layer comprises adhesive transfer tape having adhesive on a top side and a bottom side, wherein the top side adheres to the top layer.
In some embodiments, the plaster has a removable protective backing that adheres to the bottom layer.
In some embodiments, the component housing is centered on the plaster.
In some embodiments, the component housing is made of silicone.
In some embodiments, the component housing is substantially cylindrical.
In another aspect of the invention, an acoustic sensing component assembly for a physiological acoustic sensor comprises an acoustic sensing component housing having a ceiling, a wall and a floor having a mounting flange; and an acoustic sensing component stack embedded in the component housing including a body microphone with acoustic access through an opening in the floor and an environmental microphone with acoustic access through an opening in the ceiling.
These and other aspects of the invention will be better understood by reference to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the drawings that are briefly described below. Of course, the invention is defined by the appended claims.
Component assembly 600 further includes acoustic signal wires 655, 660 carrying digitized acoustic signals embodying sounds captured by microphones 610, 625. Acoustic signal wires 655, 660 run from circuit boards 615, 630 into acoustic signal output line 130. Alternatively, digitized signals embodying sounds captured by microphones 610, 625 may be carried on the same set of wires using an audio data protocol such as I2S. Circuit boards 615, 630 may be electrically connected to each other via wires, an inter-PCB connector, flex PCB material, or by other means. Acoustic signal output line 130 leaves component assembly 600 through an opening in strain relief element 440 and terminates at a remote acoustic signal acquisition or processing device. Alternatively, output line 130 may terminate at an intermediate device which connects to another cable or series of cables that eventually terminate at a remote acoustic signal acquisition or processing device, or which connects wirelessly to a remote acoustic signal acquisition or processing device.
In an exemplary embodiment, components of sensor 100 have the following dimensions:
It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that the invention can be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential character hereof. By way of example, the component housing may have other than a substantially cylindrical geometry, such as a substantially cubical one. As another example, the acoustic sensing components may be stacked in a different order. The present description is considered in all respects to be illustrative and not restrictive. The scope of the invention is indicated by the appended claims, and all changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalents thereof are intended to be embraced therein.
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