A Review of Emerging Electromagnetic-Acoustic Sensing Techniques for Healthcare Monitoring.

Journal: IEEE transactions on biomedical circuits and systems
PMID:

Abstract

Conventional electromagnetic (EM) sensing techniques such as radar and LiDAR are widely used for remote sensing, vehicle applications, weather monitoring, and clinical monitoring. Acoustic techniques such as sonar and ultrasound sensors are also used for consumer applications, such as ranging and in vivo medical/healthcare applications. It has been of long-term interest to doctors and clinical practitioners to realize continuous healthcare monitoring in hospitals and/or homes. Physiological and biopotential signals in real-time serve as important health indicators to predict and prevent serious illness. Emerging electromagnetic-acoustic (EMA) sensing techniques synergistically combine the merits of EM sensing with acoustic imaging to achieve comprehensive detection of physiological and biopotential signals. Further, EMA enables complementary fusion sensing for challenging healthcare settings, such as real-world long-term monitoring of treatment effects at home or in remote environments. This article reviews various examples of EMA sensing instruments, including implementation, performance, and application from the perspectives of circuits to systems. The novel and significant applications to healthcare are discussed. Three types of EMA sensors are presented: (1) Chip-based radar sensors for health status monitoring, (2) Thermo-acoustic sensing instruments for biomedical applications, and (3) Photoacoustic (PA) sensing and imaging systems, including dedicated reconstruction algorithms were reviewed from time-domain, frequency-domain, time-reversal, and model-based solutions. The future of EMA techniques for continuous healthcare with enhanced accuracy supported by artificial intelligence (AI) is also presented.

Authors

  • Zhongyuan Fang
  • Fei Gao
    College of Biological Sciences, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China.
  • Haoran Jin
  • Siyu Liu
    Citromax Flavors Group, Inc., 444 Washington Ave, Carlstadt, NJ, 07072, USA.
  • Wensong Wang
    School of Electrical & Electronic Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore, 639798, Singapore.
  • Ruochong Zhang
  • Zesheng Zheng
  • Xuan Xiao
    Computer Department, Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute, Jingdezhen 333046, China.
  • Kai Tang
  • Liheng Lou
  • Kea-Tiong Tang
  • Jie Chen
    School of Basic Medical Sciences, Health Science Center, Ningbo University, Ningbo, China.
  • Yuanjin Zheng
    School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore, 639798, Singapore. yjzheng@ntu.edu.sg.