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Journal ArticleDOI

Wearable and Miniaturized Sensor Technologies for Personalized and Preventive Medicine

TLDR
A review of achievements and standing challenges for the development of non‐invasive personalized and preventive medicine devices and directions for future research in miniaturized medical sensor technologies are provided.
Abstract
The unprecedented medical achievements of the last century have dramatically improved our quality of life. Today, the high cost of many healthcare approaches challenges their long-term financial sustainability and translation to a global scale. The convergence of wearable electronics, miniaturized sensor technologies, and big data analysis provides novel opportunities to improve the quality of healthcare while decreasing costs by the very early stage detection and prevention of fatal and chronic diseases. Here, some exciting achievements, emerging technologies, and standing challenges for the development of non-invasive personalized and preventive medicine devices are discussed. The engineering of wire- and power-less ultra-thin sensors on wearable biocompatible materials that can be placed on the skin, pupil, and teeth is reviewed, focusing on common solutions and current limitations. The integration and development of sophisticated sensing nanomaterials are presented with respect to their performance, showing exemplary implementations for the detection of ultra-low concentrations of biomarkers in complex mixtures such as the human sweat and breath. This review is concluded by summarizing achievements and standing challenges with the aim to provide directions for future research in miniaturized medical sensor technologies.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Patient centric drug product design in modern drug delivery as an opportunity to increase safety and effectiveness

TL;DR: Patient centric drug product development is being suggested as an important factor to increase therapeutic outcomes and to create more universal design, avoiding the necessity for multiple product presentations to cover the different patient populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey on unsupervised learning for wearable sensor-based activity recognition

TL;DR: A comprehensive review on the adoption of unsupervised learning in wearable sensor-based activity recognition can be found in this article , where the authors provide a solid background and knowledge of the existing state-of-theart models and an insight into the grand research areas that can still be explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhanced amperometric acetone sensing using electrospun non-stoichiometric WO3−x nanofibers

TL;DR: In this paper, an enhanced amperometric sensing response of electrospun tungsten oxide (WO3-x) nanofibers towards acetone with low concentrations (1.2-12.5 ppm) at 350 °C was reported.
Book ChapterDOI

Data Reliability and Quality in Body Area Networks for Diabetes Monitoring

TL;DR: A framework is proposed to ensure high data quality and reliability in WBANs for effective and real-time diabetes monitoring, composed of a set of DQ dimensions to verify that the information gleaned from sensors, processed, and delivered are of high quality so that diabetes patients and healthcare professionals are able to make reliable, high-precision diagnoses, andreal-time treatment decisions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

A wearable and highly sensitive pressure sensor with ultrathin gold nanowires

TL;DR: An efficient, low-cost fabrication strategy to construct a highly sensitive, flexible pressure sensor by sandwiching ultrathin gold nanowire-impregnated tissue paper between two thin polydimethylsiloxane sheets is reported, enabling facile large-area integration and patterning for mapping spatial pressure distribution.
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