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Design of Health Technologies Medical Sensors

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Design of Health Technologies Medical Sensors EEG Electroencephalogram Biosensors: EEG Electroencephalogram Hernia Repair (Herniorrhaphy) Diabetes / Implantable ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Design of Health Technologies Medical Sensors


1
Design of Health TechnologiesMedical Sensors
EEG Electroencephalogram
  • Biosensors
  • EEG Electroencephalogram
  • Hernia Repair (Herniorrhaphy)
  • Diabetes / Implantable insulin pumps
  • Implantable Cardioverter defibrillator (ICD)
  • Glucose monitoring
  • Other systems

2
Advanced Sensing Systems
  • Biosensors
  • EEG Electroencephalogram
  • Hernia Repair (Herniorrhaphy)
  • Diabetes / Implantable insulin pumps
  • Implantable Cardioverter defibrillator (ICD)
  • Glucose monitoring
  • Other systems

3
EEG Electroencephalogram (Monitoring Brain waves)
  • Brain cells communicate by producing tiny
    electrical impulses. In an EEG, electrodes are
    placed on the scalp over multiple areas of the
    brain to detect and record patterns of electrical
    activity and check for abnormalities.
  • You apply between 16 and 25 metal discs
    (electrodes) in different positions on your scalp
    which are held in place with a paste. The
    electrodes are connected by wires to an amplifier
    and a recorder.
  • EEG is used to help diagnose the presence and
    type of seizures, to look for causes of
    confusion, and to evaluate head injuries, tumors,
    infections, degenerative diseases, and metabolic
    disturbances that affect the brain.
  • It is also used to evaluate sleep disorders and
    to investigate periods of unconsciousness. The
    EEG may be done to confirm brain death in a
    comatose patient.

4
Hernia Repair (Herniorrhaphy)
  • A hernia occurs when part of an organ (usually
    the intestines) protrudes through a weak point or
    tear in the thin muscular wall that holds the
    abdominal organs in place.
  • Hernia repair is performed as an outpatient
    procedure using local or general anesthesia.
    First, through an incision, the segment of bowel
    is placed back into the abdominal cavity. Next,
    the muscle and fascia are stitched closed to
    repair the hernia. A piece of plastic mesh is
    often used to reinforce the defect in the
    abdominal wall.
  • A hernia occurs where any part of the body
    abnormally protrudes into any other area.

Hernia operation Animation
5
Diabetes / Implantable insulin pumps
  • Implantable insulin pumps are emerging
    insulin-delivery devices that can be surgically
    implanted under the skin of individuals with
    diabetes. The pump delivers a continuous basal
    dose of insulin through a catheter and into the
    patients abdominal cavity.
  • Implantable insulin pumps are devices that can be
    surgically implanted in individuals with diabetes
    as an insulin-delivery device. They are usually
    placed on the left side of the abdomen.
  • The disk-shaped pumps are about the diameter of a
    hockey puck but much thinner. They weight about 5
    to 8 ounces when filled. The reservoir holds up
    to several months worth of insulin and is
    refilled via a syringe injection through
    abdominal tissue. Depending on the dosage of
    insulin, the battery in an implanted pump lasts
    about eight to 13 years, according to one
    manufacturer.

Diabetes Type I and II
6
Implantable Cardioverter defibrillator (ICD)
  • Summary
  • An implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD)
    is a device that is implanted in the chest to
    constantly monitor and correct abnormal heart
    rhythms (arrhythmias). The devices were developed
    originally to correct heart rhythms that are too
    fast, but recent technological advances have
    increased the pool of possible patients who may
    benefit from an ICD. 
  • ICDs are mainly used to treat two forms of
    abnormal heart rhythms, both of which occur in
    the ventricles, or lower pumping chambers of the
    heart. If the ventricles begin to beat too
    quickly (ventricular tachycardia), the device may
    emit low-energy electrical pulses that allow the
    heart to regain its normal rhythm. If the
    tachycardia progresses to a very rapid,
    life-threatening rhythm that causes the
    ventricles to quiver rather than beat
    (ventricular fibrillation), the device may
    deliver a relatively stronger jolt to reset the
    heart rate (defibrillation).

Heart Conduction Animation
7
Implantable Cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) cont
  • Left Ventricular Assist Device Animation
  • Heart Bypass Surgery
  • Angiogram
  • Stress Test
  • Hypertension

8
Vitamins and Minerals
  • Vitamins and minerals are naturally occurring
    nutrients found in foods that are needed by the
    body for normal functioning and overall health.
    These essential nutrients must be obtained from
    the diet because the body cannot manufacture
    them. They are often referred to as
    micronutrients because they are needed in small
    amounts by the body. A lack of any of the
    essential micronutrients from the diet may lead
    to deficiencies, compromising the ability to
    function and impairing health. There is also a
    risk of toxicity with certain micronutrients when
    too much are consumed daily.
  • Several vitamins and minerals, as well as some
    phytochemicals, are classified as antioxidants.
    Recently, antioxidants have received a lot of
    attention for their possible role in disease
    prevention due to their ability to reduce
    cellular damage caused by free radicals. However,
    further research is needed. In addition, some
    researchers claim that certain vitamins and
    minerals are helpful in the prevention and/or
    treatment of various heartrelated conditions.
    There is also a substance called coenzyme Q10
    that acts like an antioxidant vitamin. Scientists
    and researchers know the roles the following
    vitamins and minerals play in our bodies, and
    this group may have hearthealthy effects
  • Vitamin and Mineral Animation

9
Magneto-elastic sensors (Grimes)
  • The magneto-elastic material resonates at a
    characteristic frequency when excited by a
    magnetic field.

10
Magneto-elastic sensors
  • The magneto-elastic ribbon is made of a
    commercial sheet called Metglas.
  • The polymer is a custom co-polymer made by the
    Grimes group. It is believed to work because
    glucose bonds to sites on polymer chains that
    separate them from other chains. This allows the
    polymer to absorb water.

11
Magneto-elastic sensors
  • Its frequency response (in air) shows a sharp
    peak which is determined by the density of the
    polymer layer

12
Magneto-elastic sensors
  • Resonant frequency in a liquid is lower, and the
    peak is not as sharp.

13
Magneto-elastic sensors
  • Frequency response in water varies with the
    glucose concentration, in an almost perfectly
    linear curve.

14
Sensor measurement
  • The electronics are simple. A sharp spike is
    applied to a driving coil, and a response is
    measured in a sense coil.

15
Sensor measurement
  • The magnetic spike is short, about 3 gauss for 16
    micro-seconds (earths magnetic field is about
    0.5 gauss, and a refrigerator magnet about 10
    gauss).
  • The pickup coil measures sensor activity for a
    further 8 milli-seconds. The response is
    transformed with an FFT to determine the
    frequency peak.
  • This should be easy to do with a small,
    battery-powered device. Because the sensors
    response is quite slow (tens of minutes to
    respond), it is enough to take readings every few
    minutes.

16
Biosensor status
  • There are many promising systems on the horizon,
    but the only commercially-deployed biosensors are
    glucose monitors (4B). 3 main types
  • Single Use Disposable sensing material, often
    static measurement. Cheap and portable, but low
    sensitivity and accuracy.
  • Intermittent Use Often use hydrodynamics
    generally much better performance from sensing a
    moving fluid. Its still a challenge to move these
    out of the lab and onto a chip.

17
Biosensor status
  • Continuous (In Vivo) Sensors Very economical,
    but very hard to calibrate and may suffer from
    unknown amount of drift.

18
Biosensor design
  • We give a brief introduction to micro-fluidic
    sensor design.
  • While these were originally fabricated in silicon
    using MEMS techniques, the trend is toward glass
    and plastic as the substrate.
  • Both glass and many plastics allow optical
    measurements, but silicon is opaque to visible
    light.
  • Glass and plastic are also more resistant to
    contamination from the chemicals used in the
    measurement.

19
Biosensor design
  • Surface immobilization The first step is sensing
    is creating a selective surface to react to the
    sensed agent

20
Biosensor design
  • Bead immobilization A variation that uses beads
    to increase relative surface area.

21
Biosensor design
  • Detection Several methods, including resonant
    frequency of MEMS cantilevers. But amperometry
    (current measurement) is the most widely used
    approach. Typical mechanisms for current flow
    include redox cycles between the target group and
    variants.

22
Biosensor design
  • Optical Detection A 2D array of agent/antigen
    reactions produces fluorescent traces

23
Biosensor design
  • Magnetic Detection The antibodies are
    immobilized on a surface and magnetic beads bind
    to sites where the analyte is attached.

24
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
25
Reuse
  • Most immunosensors use bound antibodies and
    immobilization. Removing the bound species can be
    difficult without destroying the sensors.
  • Methods and results vary, but a recent detector
    for Chagas disease used glycine-HCl to wash the
    sensor, and reported efficacy for more than 30
    cycles.

26
Biosensor design
  • Systems-on-a-chip are promising but coming
    slowly. Biosensing still seems a long way from
    commercial viability. But there are some
    promising prototypes

27
Discussion Questions
  1. It may be a while before we have highly
    integrated sensors for many pathogens (and
    economics dictates that they will come for
    first-world diseases first). Can you think of
    telemedicine/information tools to help facilitate
    traditional (but simple) lab methods?
  2. Sensors for medical diagnosis may always be a
    difficult economic proposition. Can you think of
    other models that might work? E.g. home testing?
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