Archives: 5/2011

8823rgl Non Invasively Measuring Brain Temperature

MMS Radiometric Sensing Transducer

Researchers at the Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters in Norfolk, Virginia, have developed a device that can non-invasively measure brain temperature. The device is about the size of a box of matches and rests on a patient’s head, passively detecting microwave emissions produced by the brain tissue beneath the skull. The device is able to measure the temperature of brain tissue 1.5 centimeters beneath the skull. It mainly would have application in monitoring cooling therapy, and would be used to prevent brain damage during cardiac arrest, total circulatory arrest, or for monitoring intracerebral temperatures in hypoxic newborns.The device is currently being evaluated on infants with Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy, and findings from a pilot study were presented at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies.

Having contacted the researchers, we received more details about the system:

The transducer is a non-invasive, passive system that is placed on the infant’s head and measures naturally occurring radiation in the microwave spectrum. It is important to stress that this is a passive system so therefore emits no signal, making its use completely harmless. We then quite accurately correlate this emission to temperature of the brain at depth. The pilot study at EVMS focuses on infants suffering from Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE) having been deprived of oxygen and experienced trauma at birth. The use of moderate systemic hypothermia (HT) in these cases has shown to decrease death and disability, in fact improving outcomes by as much as 50%. Conventional cooling systems reference rectal temperature to control cooling and rewarming over the course of the 72 hour hypothermia therapy. Application of the MMS thermometry system in this study has shown that there are differences between rectal and brain temperature, therefore the system and knowledge of actual brain temperature it provides will allow improved control of temperature management during clinical hypothermia if integrated into practice.

“We are pleased with the tremendous initial response to this early data and are proud of the potential impact that knowledge of brain temperature in these challenging neonatal cases may have on the ability to manage hypothermia treatment. We plan to proceed with gathering additional clinical evidence as well as exploring expanded opportunities for clinical application of the thermometry system”, Jeff Carr, Chief Operating Officer of MMS.

Press release: Researchers develop device to measure brain temperature non-invasively…

Related abstracts (.pdf) presented at Pediatric Academic Society (PAS/ASPR Joint Meeting) congress in Denver, CO April 30-May 3…

nvo2efj Bioscience’s Vectra DA Assay Helps Doctors Predict Patients’ Response to RA Treatment

South San Francisco, CA based Crescendo Bioscience has announced study results which validate its Vectra DA blood test’s ability to predict how a patient will respond to treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Vectra DA tests for 12 biomarkers which are associated with RA, and uses a proprietary algorithm to assign a numerical score which can determine how a patient is responding to treatment.

From the product page:

Vectra DA was developed using a broad survey of RA biology, with serial studies to determine a final assay composed of biomarkers that robustly assess disease activity. Approximately 400 candidate biomarkers were chosen from an extensive screen of literature, databases, and experimental data that included gene expression, protein arrays, and biological pathways. Of those, 130 candidates were screened in clinical studies. Successive studies in >1,300 total patients with RA refined the biomarker set to those 12 with the greatest ability to evaluate RA disease activity, based on association with clinical measures including the DAS28CRP. A statistical algorithm was developed that used the biomarker levels to calculate a disease activity score. Evaluation of the algorithm in an independent patient cohort validated its ability to quantify RA disease activity.

Press release:Studies Show Crescendo Bioscience’s Vectra™ DA Can Track Early Response to Rheumatoid Arthritis Therapy and Predict Joint Damage at the Molecular Level…

Product page: Vectra DA…

5s5bji3l Somnus Sleep Shirt Comfortably and Fashionably Monitors Your SleepMIT startup Nyx Devices wants to watch you sleep. However, unlike other methods of sleep diagnostics, their method doesn’t sterile-looking sleep laboratories or intrusive EEG’s. All you need to do is dress for the occasion, in this case, in Nyx Device’s Somnus Sleep Shirt. The Somnus Sleep Shirt is a form-fitting shirt embedded with a couple of sensors to measure your respiration. The sensor information is stored in a small data recorder kept in a hip pocket, which the user removes and connects to a computer for uploading.

Analyzing sleep patterns based on respiration is still considered experimental, but inventor and Massachusetts General Hospital sleep neurologist Matt Bianchi thinks the device could help patients suffering from insomnia.

Take a look at this video below of Matt Bianchi explaining how the Somnus Sleep Shirt works:

Product page: Nyx Devices…

MIT project page …

(hat tip: Engadget)

61fr1 Lens Free High Resolution 3D Optical Imaging on a Chip
Researchers at UCLA have developed a lensless microscope-on-a-chip. Overcoming many of the limitations of traditional microscopy, they have put a sensor on a chip which can take three-dimensional tomographic images of miniscule samples. Images are obtained by placing the object of interest on top of the chip and subsequently illuminating the object from many different angles. The chip then reconstructs a three-dimensional tomographic image from the observed shadows. From the press release:

61fr2 Lens Free High Resolution 3D Optical Imaging on a Chip

An optical imaging system small enough to fit onto an opto-electronic chip provides a variety of benefits. Because of the automation involved in on-chip systems, scientific work could be sped up significantly, which might have a great impact in the fields of cell and developmental biology. In addition, the small size not only has great potential for miniaturizing systems but also leads to cost savings on equipment. 

The optical microscope, invented more than 400 years ago, has tended to grow larger and more complex as it has been modified to image ever-smaller objects with better resolution. To address this lack of progress in miniaturization, Ozcan’s research group — with graduate student Serhan Isikman and postdoctoral scholar Waheb Bishara as lead researchers — developed the new tomographic microscopy platform through the next evolution of a lens-free imaging technology the group created and has been improving for years.

Ozcan, a researcher at the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA, makes the analogy that a traditional optical microscope is like a huge set of pipes delivering content, in the form of images, to the user. Over years of development, bottlenecks occur that impede further improvement. Even if one part of the system — that is, one bottleneck — is improved, other bottlenecks keep that improvement from being fully realized. Not so with the lens-free system, according to Ozcan.

“Lens-free imaging removes the pipes altogether by utilizing an entirely new design,” he said.

The system takes advantage of the fact that organic structures, such as cells, are partially transparent. So by shining a light on a sample of cells, the shadows created reveal not only the cells’ outlines but details about their sub-cellular structures as well.

“These details can be captured and analyzed if the shadow is directed onto a digital sensor array,” Isikman said. “The end result of this process is an image taken without using a lens.”

Ozcan envisions this lens-free imaging system as one component in a lab-on-a-chip platform. It could potentially fit beneath a microfluidic chip, a tool for the precise control and manipulation of sub-millimeter biological samples and fluids, and the two tools would operate in tandem, with the microfluidic chip depositing and subsequently removing a sample from the lens-free imager in an automated, or high-throughput, process.

The platform’s 3-D images are created by rotating the light source to illuminate the samples from multiple angles. These multiple angles also allow the system to utilize tomography, a powerful imaging technique. Through the use of tomography, the system is able to produce 3-D images without sacrificing resolution.

“The field of view of lens-based microscopes is limited because the lens focuses on a narrow area of a sample,” Bishara said. “A lens-free microscope has both a much larger field of view and depth of field because the imaging is done by the digital sensor array and is not constrained by a lens.”

The results have been published online in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Full story at UCLA: Optical microscope without lenses produces high-resolution 3-D images on a chip…

Article abstract: Lens-free optical tomographic microscope with a large imaging volume on a chip…

st23jdjd Stryker ShapeMatch Cutting Guides for Triathlon Knee System Get U.S. OKStryker has received 510(k) clearance from the FDA for its ShapeMatch Cutting Guides. The cutting guides are single use devices manufactured specifically for each patient based on volumetric data from CT or MRI scans.

ShapeMatch Technology utilizes proprietary 3D imaging software to develop a customized pre-operative surgical plan for each patient. Upon surgeon review and approval, this plan is used to develop cutting guides for the individual patient. ShapeMatch Technology is only available for use with Stryker’s Triathlon Knee System, which has demonstrated the best performance among the most frequently used brands of total knee implants as measured by revision rates in the National Joint Registry of England and Wales.

This technology has the potential to positively impact hospital costs associated with various stages of the patient care continuum during knee surgery.

Press release: Stryker Receives FDA 510(K) Clearance for Shapematch® Cutting Guides …

03kdkj AngioDynamics New 90cm VenaCure EVLT KitAngioDynamics has released a 90 centimeter version of the company’s NeverTouch kit as part of the VenaCure EVLT system for treatment of varicose veins. The longer TRE-Sheath introducer allows surgeons to access veins above the ankle and below the knee.

Together with the 25 cm, 45 cm and 65 cm kit lengths, the new kit continues to build on the core benefits of the NeverTouch gold-tip laser fiber and VenaCure EVLT® system. The primary innovation in the NeverTouch tip is a glass weld at the distal tip of a 600 um fiber. The weld results in an effective fiber diameter of 905 ums and lowers the actual power density at the tip by 56% from that of a standard bare-tip 600 um fiber. This provides a homogeneous ablation with less focal charring of the vein wall that is typically seen with bare-tip fibers. The gold jacketed tip also maximizes tip visibility under ultrasound and eliminates chances of inadvertent fiber tip contact with the vein wall, further improving safety and patient comfort.

Press release: AngioDynamics Expands VenaCure EVLT® System for Varicose Veins with Longer 90 cm Kit…

Product page: VenaCure EVLT Endovenous Laser System …

ford ecg seat front Ford Unveils Contactless ECG Sensing Driver SeatJust a week ago, Ford announced partnerships for its in-car health management system, and now it is unveiling another, this time self-developed, auto part: a contactless ECG sensing driver’s seat. The seat has six built-in sensors that together produce a signal very similar to a single lead ECG. The sensors, developed by Aachen University in Germany, consist of capacitative electrodes that can detect electrical activity contact-free at a short distance.  Through thin layers of clothing an accurate ECG can be produced, while thicker layers increase interference.  But even with clothes thickness of 2.5 mm, at least the QRS-complex can be clearly identified. Several filtering techniques are employed to reduce artifacts caused by body movements.

According to Ford, the seat produces accurate readings during 98 percent of driving time for 95 percent of drivers.

ford ecg seat Ford Unveils Contactless ECG Sensing Driver SeatOf course, detecting arrhythmias or other ECG abnormalities is one thing, but the next question is what to do with those signals. First thing the system will do is to warn the driver to pull over and seek medical attention, or send out an alert to emergency medical workers if necessary. In addition, Ford has a few technical tricks, including advanced safety technologies such as Lane Departure Warning with Lane Keeping Aid, Active City Stop and Speed Limiter that it envisions to be connected to the system. The system could also potentially work as a “black box”, being linked to SYNC’s Emergency Assistance function to inform emergency response teams of the driver’s heart condition before, during and after an accident. Lastly the Ford engineers also foresee the heart monitoring seat being used to observe heart patients, recording their ECG signal for longer time periods and possibly reducing the need for visits to the hospital.

When the seat will be available as an option for your next car is still unknown. For more technical details on the contactless ECG technology, in an earlier incarnation of the seat dubbed the “Aachen SmartChair”, follow the link below.

Press release: Ford Researchers Develop Car Seat That Monitors Drivers’ Heart Activity…

Details on the contactless ECG: Wireless and Non-contact ECG Measurement System – the “Aachen SmartChair”… (PDF)

876tg2 USC Researchers Develop Guide Vests for the Visually Impaired
Researchers from the Viterbi School of Engineering at the University of Southern California

876tg1 USC Researchers Develop Guide Vests for the Visually Impaired

Image from head-mounted camera (top) and 3D rendering from SLAM software (bottom)

have developed a high-tech device for helping visually-impaired people get around. The system consists of a head-mounted camera connected to a computer that uses a special software, called Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM), to convert images of the environment into three-dimensional spatial maps to determine a safe route around obstacles.

The route information is sent to a vest containing four motors on each side of a person’s shoulder and waist that vibrate if an obstacle is in his or her path.

Recall that we also wrote a couple months ago about a similar setup from the University of Konstanz in Germany that uses a hacked Microsoft Kinect sensor to assist in navigation.

Full story: ‘Guide vests’ — robotic navigation aids for the visually impaired …

OTC

easywake EASYWAKEme Smart Sensor Based Alarm ClockEASYWAKEme is an intelligent alarm clock system, that includes a wrist worn device and software installed on your smart phone, that helps you wake up at an optimal time.  A sensor on the wrist monitors your movements during sleep, in essence differentiating between when you’re deep asleep and when you’re closer to consciousness.  The device talks to the software on the phone via Bluetooth, and decides when to emit gentle waking sounds and send vibrations to the wrist.  Additionally, the system keeps track of your sleeping patterns, compiling statistics and providing charts for review.

From the product page:

EASYWAKEme uses the Adaptive 3D Sleep Capture technology to analyze body motion in sleep. With EASYWAKEme you don’t even have to use your computer – this wise alarm clock does the job simply using your mobile phone.

Designed as a mobile phone accessory, EASYWAKEme uses Bluetooth technology to send your sleep data to your mobile phone. Then you may choose to automatically upload the sleep data to our website and view your sleep stats easily.

The Dreamware application installed onto your phone allows you to set

  • wake-up interval
  • wake-up tone
  • activate the EASYWAKEme vibro
  • and even more personalized options.

To make your morning even more awesome, Dreamware also allows you to choose your favourite sound to wake up with. You may choose to wake up with the Dreamware default sounds, download more melodies from our website, or add your favourite music to the list.

Product page: EASYWAKEme…