Monitoring Patients Using Intelligent T-Shirts

With slight modifications, the prototype can also be applied in other areas

Scientists at la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M — Carlos III University in Madrid) who participate in the LOBIN consortium have developed an ‘intelligent’ T-shirt that monitors the human body (temperature, heart rate, etc.) and locates patients within the hospital, as if it were a GPS system that works in closed spaces. It can even determine if the subject is seated, lying down, walking or running.

Using this garment-based patient biomonitoring platform allows researchers to register a number of the patient’s physiological parameters in a non-intrusive manner. “The information gathered by an intelligent T-shirt using e-textile technology is sent, without using wires, to an information management system, which then shows the patient’s location and vital signs in real time,” explain the UC3M researchers. The system is designed to be used in hospitals and can be divided into two parts: the fixed infrastructure, which would be pre-installed in the hospital, and the mobile units, which would move with the patients.

The mobile units include an intelligent T-shirt and a localization device, which can be carried in a pocket and, which they intend to incorporate into the garment in the future. The T-shirt is washable and includes electrodes that detect bioelectric power through which an electrocardiogram can be obtained. In addition, it has a removable device that includes a thermometer and an accelerometer, which are used to take the patient’s temperature, his/her relative position (reclining, standing, etc.) and his/her level of physical activity. Finally, the indoor localization unit is activated periodically, receives signals from the units that make up the fixed localization infrastructure and wirelessly sends that information to the information management system. Once the information is received there, the localization algorithm that has been developed is able to establish the individual’s position within a two-meter margin of error, and to mark the spot on a map of the hospital.

Medical applications

The prototype was developed as part of the project “LOBIN: Localización y Biomonitorización a través de Redes Inalámbricas en Entornos Hospitalarios” (Locating and biomonitoring by means of Wireless Networks in Hospitals), funded by the Ministry of Industry, Tourism and Commerce, Plan Avanza I+D (Advance R + D Plan) (TSI-020302-2008-57), and is the result of the collaboration of the national consortium made up of researchers at UC3M and other companies and R+D centers, such as Simave Sistemas, Nlaza Soluciones, Nuubo and the Centro Tecnológico de Telecomunicaciones de Galicia (Gradiant). The wireless communications infrastructure and the communications software for the prototype were designed at UC3M. In addition, the UC3M researchers carried out the phases in which the different technologies developed by the associates were integrated; this integration was later validated in the Cardiology Unit of La Paz Hospital in Madrid. During this validation phase, the system was tested 24 hours a day, with five patients being monitored simultaneously.

“Thanks to this experience with the hospital personnel, who were very satisfied with the platform, we found several valuable possible improvements to the system,” explain researchers Víctor Custodio, Gregorio López and José Ignacio Moreno, of UC3M’s Department of Telematic Engineering.

See Also

Read more . . .

Bookmark this page for “patient monitoring” and check back regularly as these articles update on a very frequent basis. The view is set to “news”. Try clicking on “video” and “2” for more articles.

>

What's Your Reaction?
Don't Like it!
0
I Like it!
0
Scroll To Top