TY - JOUR
T1 - Simple, miniaturized biosensors for wireless mapping of thermoregulatory responses
AU - Oh, Seyong
AU - Yoo, Jae Young
AU - Maeng, Woo Youl
AU - Yoo, Seonggwang
AU - Yang, Tianyu
AU - Slattery, Susan M.
AU - Pessano, Sara
AU - Chang, Emily
AU - Jeong, Hyoyoung
AU - Kim, Jihye
AU - Ahn, Hak Young
AU - Kim, Yeongdo
AU - Kim, Joohee
AU - Xu, Shuai
AU - Weese-Mayer, Debra E.
AU - Rogers, John A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2023/10/1
Y1 - 2023/10/1
N2 - Temperature is the most commonly collected vital sign in all of clinical medicine; it plays a critical role in care decisions related to topics ranging from infection to inflammation, sleep, and fertility. Most assessments of body temperature occur at isolated anatomical locations (e.g. axilla, rectum, temporal artery, or oral cavity). Even this relatively primitive mode for monitoring can be challenging with vulnerable patient populations due to physical encumbrances and artifacts associated with the sizes, weights, shapes and mechanical properties of the sensors and, for continuous monitoring, their hard-wired interfaces to data collection units. Here, we introduce a simple, miniaturized, lightweight sensor as a wireless alternative, designed to address demanding applications such as those related to the care of neonates in high ambient humidity environments with radiant heating found in incubators in intensive care units. Such devices can be deployed onto specific anatomical locations of premature infants for homeostatic assessments. The estimated core body temperature aligns, to within 0.05 °C, with clinical grade, wired sensors, consistent with regulatory medical device requirements. Time-synchronized, multi-device operation across multiple body locations supports continuous, full-body measurements of spatio-temporal variations in temperature and additional modes of determining tissue health status in the context of sepsis detection and various environmental exposures. In addition to thermal sensing, these same devices support measurements of a range of other essential vital signs derived from thermo-mechanical coupling to the skin, for applications ranging from neonatal and infant care to sleep medicine and even pulmonary medicine.
AB - Temperature is the most commonly collected vital sign in all of clinical medicine; it plays a critical role in care decisions related to topics ranging from infection to inflammation, sleep, and fertility. Most assessments of body temperature occur at isolated anatomical locations (e.g. axilla, rectum, temporal artery, or oral cavity). Even this relatively primitive mode for monitoring can be challenging with vulnerable patient populations due to physical encumbrances and artifacts associated with the sizes, weights, shapes and mechanical properties of the sensors and, for continuous monitoring, their hard-wired interfaces to data collection units. Here, we introduce a simple, miniaturized, lightweight sensor as a wireless alternative, designed to address demanding applications such as those related to the care of neonates in high ambient humidity environments with radiant heating found in incubators in intensive care units. Such devices can be deployed onto specific anatomical locations of premature infants for homeostatic assessments. The estimated core body temperature aligns, to within 0.05 °C, with clinical grade, wired sensors, consistent with regulatory medical device requirements. Time-synchronized, multi-device operation across multiple body locations supports continuous, full-body measurements of spatio-temporal variations in temperature and additional modes of determining tissue health status in the context of sepsis detection and various environmental exposures. In addition to thermal sensing, these same devices support measurements of a range of other essential vital signs derived from thermo-mechanical coupling to the skin, for applications ranging from neonatal and infant care to sleep medicine and even pulmonary medicine.
KW - Bioelectronics
KW - Health monitoring
KW - Thermoregulatory responses
KW - Wireless sensors
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85166317758
U2 - 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115545
DO - 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115545
M3 - Article
C2 - 37517336
AN - SCOPUS:85166317758
SN - 0956-5663
VL - 237
JO - Biosensors and Bioelectronics
JF - Biosensors and Bioelectronics
M1 - 115545
ER -