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Tidal Volume and Instantaneous Respiration Rate Estimation using a Volumetric Surrogate Signal Acquired via a Smartphone Camera

Authors
Reyes, Bersain A.Reljin, NatasaKong, YoungsunNam, YunyoungChon, Ki H.
Issue Date
May-2017
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Keywords
Optical monitoring; respiration rate; smart-phone camera; tidal volume; time-frequency analysis; volume surrogate
Citation
IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics, v.21, no.3, pp 764 - 777
Pages
14
Journal Title
IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics
Volume
21
Number
3
Start Page
764
End Page
777
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/7594
DOI
10.1109/JBHI.2016.2532876
ISSN
2168-2194
2168-2208
Abstract
Two parameters that a breathing status monitor should provide include tidal volume (V-T) and respiration rate (RR). Recently, we implemented an optical monitoring approach that tracks chest wall movements directly on a smartphone. In this paper, we explore the use of such non-contact optical monitoring to obtain a volumetric surrogate signal, via analysis of intensity changes in the video channels caused by the chest wall movements during breathing, in order to provide not only average RR but also information about VT and to track RR at each time instant (IRR). The algorithm, implemented on an Android smartphone, is used to analyze the video information from the smartphone's camera and provide in real time the chest movement signal from N = 15 healthy volunteers, each breathing at VT ranging from 300 mL to 3 L. These measurements are performed separately for each volunteer. Simultaneous recording of volume signals from a spirometer is regarded as reference. A highly linear relationship between peak-to-peak amplitude of the smartphone-acquired chest movement signal and spirometer VT is found (r(2) = 0.951 +/- 0.042, mean +/- SD). After calibration on a subject-by-subject basis, no statistically significant bias is found in terms of VT estimation; the 95% limits of agreement are -0.348 to 0.376 L, and the root-mean-square error (RMSE) was 0.182 +/- 0.107 L. In terms of IRR estimation, a highly linear relation between smartphone estimates and the spirometer reference was found (r(2) = 0.999 +/- 0.002). The bias, 95% limits of agreement, and RMSE are -0.024 breaths-per-minute (bpm), -0.850 to 0.802 bpm, and 0.414 +/- 0.178 bpm, respectively. These promising results show the feasibility of developing an inexpensive and portable breathing monitor, which could provide information about IRR as well as VT, when calibrated on an individual basis, using smartphones. Further studies are required to enable practical implementation of the proposed approach.
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