Abstract
To assess whether radar technology can be used for monitoring blood pressure via information from the aorta, two experiments were performed: (i) measurements on a phantom model and (ii) acquisitions on a human subject for in vivo experiments. A linear dependency of phase on radius in the radar echoes in the phantom model showed that the information regarding the radius of a circular, cylindrical object depended on the clutter environment: in a low-clutter case two distinct reflections were identified, whereas in the high-clutter case it was possible to extract a proxy. Radar echoes from antennas strapped to the back of a human subject showed a clear signature from a discernible, distinct reflector believed to be the aorta. However, as for the highclutter case, only a proxy for aortic radius is available as basis for estimation, which is most likely coupled with aortic displacements.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Solberg, L. E., Aardal, Ø., Berger, T., Balasingham, I., Fosse, E., & Hamran, S. E. (2015). Experimental investigation into radar-based central blood pressure estimation. IET Radar, Sonar and Navigation, 9(2), 145–153. https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-rsn.2014.0206
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