Browsing by Author "Nguyen, Tam Q. (TTU)"
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Item A Feasibility Study of Remote Non-Contact Vital Signs (NCVS) Monitoring in a Clinic Using a Novel Sensor Realized by Software-Defined Radio (SDR)(2023) Liu, Yang (TTU); Sweeney, Clint (TTU); Mayeda, Jill C. (TTU); Lopez, Jerry (TTU); Lie, Paul E. (TTUHSC); Nguyen, Tam Q. (TTU); Lie, Donald Y.C. (TTU)The COVID-19 outbreak has caused panic around the world as it is highly infectious and has caused about 5 million deaths globally. A robust wireless non-contact vital signs (NCVS) sensor system that can continuously monitor the respiration rate (RR) and heart rate (HR) of patients clinically and remotely with high accuracy can be very attractive to healthcare workers (HCWs), as such a system can not only avoid HCWs’ close contact with people with COVID-19 to reduce the infection rate, but also be used on patients quarantined at home for telemedicine and wireless acute-care. Therefore, we developed a custom Doppler-based NCVS radar sensor system operating at 2.4 GHz using a software-defined radio (SDR) technology, and the novel biosensor system has achieved impressive real-time RR/HR monitoring accuracies within approximately 0.5/3 breath/beat per minute (BPM) on student volunteers tested in our engineering labs. To further test the sensor system’s feasibility for clinical use, we applied and obtained an Internal Review Board (IRB) approval from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (TTUHSC) and have used this NCVS monitoring system in a doctor’s clinic at TTUHSC; following testing on 20 actual patients for a small-scale clinical trial, we have found that the system was still able to achieve good NCVS monitoring accuracies within ~0.5/10 BPM across 20 patients of various weight, height and age. These results suggest our custom-designed NCVS monitoring system may be feasible for future clinical use to help combatting COVID-19 and other infectious diseases.Item Real-time classification of patients with balance disorders vs. normal subjects using a low-cost small wireless wearable gait sensor(2016) Nukala, Bhargava Teja (TTU); Nakano, Taro (TTU); Rodriguez, Amanda; Tsay, Jerry (TTU); Lopez, Jerry (TTU); Nguyen, Tam Q. (TTU); Zupancic, Steven (TTUHSC); Lie, Donald Y.C. (TTU)Gait analysis using wearable wireless sensors can be an economical, convenient and effective way to provide diagnostic and clinical information for various health-related issues. In this work, our custom designed low-cost wireless gait analysis sensor that contains a basic inertial measurement unit (IMU) was used to collect the gait data for four patients diagnosed with balance disorders and additionally three normal subjects, each performing the Dynamic Gait Index (DGI) tests while wearing the custom wireless gait analysis sensor (WGAS). The small WGAS includes a tri-axial accelerometer integrated circuit (IC), two gyroscopes ICs and a Texas Instruments (TI) MSP430 microcontroller and is worn by each subject at the T4 position during the DGI tests. The raw gait data are wirelessly transmitted from the WGAS to a near-by PC for real-time gait data collection and analysis. In order to perform successful classification of patients vs. normal subjects, we used several different classification algorithms, such as the back propagation artificial neural network (BP-ANN), support vector machine (SVM), k-nearest neighbors (KNN) and binary decision trees (BDT), based on features extracted from the raw gait data of the gyroscopes and accelerometers. When the range was used as the input feature, the overall classification accuracy obtained is 100% with BP-ANN, 98% with SVM, 96% with KNN and 94% using BDT. Similar high classification accuracy results were also achieved when the standard deviation or other values were used as input features to these classifiers. These results show that gait data collected from our very low-cost wearable wireless gait sensor can effectively differentiate patients with balance disorders from normal subjects in real time using various classifiers, the success of which may eventually lead to accurate and objective diagnosis of abnormal human gaits and their underlying etiologies in the future, as more patient data are being collected.