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Journal ArticleDOI

Contactless multiple wavelength photoplethysmographic imaging: a first step toward "SpO2 camera" technology.

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TLDR
A route toward contactless imaging of arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2) distribution within tissue is described, based upon detection of a two-dimensional matrix of spatially resolved optical plethysmographic signals at different wavelengths, which shows potential for non-contact 2-D imaging reflection-mode pulse oximetry.
Abstract
We describe a route toward contactless imaging of arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2) distribution within tissue, based upon detection of a two-dimensional matrix of spatially resolved optical plethysmographic signals at different wavelengths. As a first step toward SpO 2-imaging we built a monochrome CMOS-camera with apochromatic lens and 3λ-LED-ringlight (λ1 = 660 nm, λ 2 = 810 nm, λ3 = 940 nm; 100 LEDs λ -1). We acquired movies at three wavelengths while simultaneously recording ECG and respiration for seven volunteers. We repeated this experiment for one volunteer at increased frame rate, additionally recording the pulse wave of a pulse oximeter. Movies were processed by dividing each image frame into discrete Regions of Interest (ROIs), averaging 10 × 10 raw pixels each. For each ROI, pulsatile variation over time was assigned to a matrix of ROI-pixel time traces with individual Fourier spectra. Photoplethysmograms correlated well with respiration reference traces at three wavelengths. Increased frame rates revealed weaker pulsations (main frequency components 0. 95 and 1.9 Hz) superimposed upon respiration-correlated photoplethysmograms, which were heartbeat-related at three wavelengths. We acquired spatially resolved heartbeat-related photoplethysmograms at multiple wavelengths using a remote camera. This feasibility study shows potential for non-contact 2-D imaging reflection-mode pulse oximetry. Clinical devices, however, require further development.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Photoplethysmography and its application in clinical physiological measurement.

TL;DR: Photoplethysmography is a simple and low-cost optical technique that can be used to detect blood volume changes in the microvascular bed of tissue and is often used non-invasively to make measurements at the skin surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Remote plethysmographic imaging using ambient light

TL;DR: Plethysmographic signals were measured remotely (>1m) using ambient light and a simple consumer level digital camera in movie mode as discussed by the authors, which may be useful for medical purposes such as characterization of vascular skin lesions and remote sensing of vital signs (e.g., heart and respiration rates) for triage or sports purposes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-contact, automated cardiac pulse measurements using video imaging and blind source separation.

TL;DR: This is the first demonstration of a low-cost accurate video-based method for contact-free heart rate measurements that is automated, motion-tolerant and capable of performing concomitant measurements on more than one person at a time.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Detecting Pulse from Head Motions in Video

TL;DR: This method tracks features on the head and performs principal component analysis (PCA) to decompose their trajectories into a set of component motions and chooses the component that best corresponds to heartbeats based on its temporal frequency spectrum.
Journal ArticleDOI

How accurate is pulse rate variability as an estimate of heart rate variability?: A review on studies comparing photoplethysmographic technology with an electrocardiogram

TL;DR: Studies investigating the accuracy of PRV as an estimate of HRV, regardless of the underlying technology, speak in favor of sufficient accuracy when subjects are at rest, although many studies suggest that short-term variability is somewhat overestimated by PRV.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Spectrophotometric monitoring of arterial oxygen saturation in the fingertip

TL;DR: The instrument has been useful in monitoring arterial oxygenation in patients with respiratory failure in the authors' intensive-care unit and the reproducibility was assessed in a healthy subject by measuring the oxygen saturation repeatedly 60 times.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can We Ever Escape from Data Overload? A Cognitive Systems Diagnosis

TL;DR: It is proposed that (a) data overload is difficult because of the context sensitivity problem – meaning lies, not in data, but in relationships of data to interests and expectations and (b) new waves of technology exacerbate data overload when they ignore or try to finesse context sensitivity.
PatentDOI

Artefact reduction in photoplethysmography

TL;DR: The physical origins of the photoplethysmographic signals are explored in relation to a nonlinear measure of the observed intensity fluctuations and the nonlinearity renormalizes the received pulsations with optical information in a manner that aids physical interpretation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design and evaluation of a continuous-wave diffuse optical tomography system.

TL;DR: An inexpensive and portable continuous-wave DOT system containing 18 laser diode sources and 16 silicon detectors, which can acquire 288 independent measurements in less than 4 seconds is built, and rat brain measurements following electrical forepaw stimulation using DOT are presented.
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