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Journal Article

Citation

Suzuki S, Matsui T, Kawahara H, Ichiki H, Shimizu J, Kondo Y, Gotoh S, Yura H, Takase B, Ishihara M. Med. Biol. Eng. Comput. 2009; 47(1): 101-105.

Affiliation

Department of Management Systems Engineering, Tokyo Metropolitan University, 6-6 Asahigaoka, Hino, Tokyo 191-0065, Japan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering, Publisher Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s11517-008-0408-x

PMID

18946695

Abstract

We developed a novel non-contact monitoring system to measure the vital signs of casualties inside a moving ambulance. This system was designed to prevent exposure of patients to infectious organisms under biochemical hazard conditions. The system consists of two microwave radars: a 10-GHz respiratory-monitoring radar is positioned 20 cm away from the surface of the isolator. The 24-GHz cardiac-monitoring radar is positioned below the stretcher underneath the isolator. The subject (22.13 +/- 0.99 years) was placed inside the isolator on a stretcher in the simulated ambulance. While the ambulance was in motion at a speed of approximately 10 km/h, the heart rates determined by the cardiac-monitoring radar correlated significantly with those measured by ECG (r = 0.69, p < 0.01), and the respiratory rates derived from the respiratory-monitoring radar correlated with those measured by the respiration curves (r = 0.97, p < 0.0001). The proposed system appears promising for future on-ambulance monitoring of the vital sign of casualties exposed to toxins.


Language: en

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