Proposal for a Home Sleep Monitoring Platform Employing a Smart Glove.
Remo LazazzeraPablo LagunaEduardo GilGuy CarraultPublished in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
The present paper proposes the design of a sleep monitoring platform. It consists of an entire sleep monitoring system based on a smart glove sensor called UpNEA worn during the night for signals acquisition, a mobile application, and a remote server called AeneA for cloud computing. UpNEA acquires a 3-axis accelerometer signal, a photoplethysmography (PPG), and a peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) signal from the index finger. Overnight recordings are sent from the hardware to a mobile application and then transferred to AeneA. After cloud computing, the results are shown in a web application, accessible for the user and the clinician. The AeneA sleep monitoring activity performs different tasks: sleep stages classification and oxygen desaturation assessment; heart rate and respiration rate estimation; tachycardia, bradycardia, atrial fibrillation, and premature ventricular contraction detection; and apnea and hypopnea identification and classification. The PPG breathing rate estimation algorithm showed an absolute median error of 0.5 breaths per minute for the 32 s window and 0.2 for the 64 s window. The apnea and hypopnea detection algorithm showed an accuracy (Acc) of 75.1%, by windowing the PPG in one-minute segments. The classification task revealed 92.6% Acc in separating central from obstructive apnea, 83.7% in separating central apnea from central hypopnea and 82.7% in separating obstructive apnea from obstructive hypopnea. The novelty of the integrated algorithms and the top-notch cloud computing products deployed, encourage the production of the proposed solution for home sleep monitoring.
Keyphrases
- obstructive sleep apnea
- positive airway pressure
- machine learning
- sleep quality
- heart rate
- deep learning
- physical activity
- sleep apnea
- atrial fibrillation
- healthcare
- catheter ablation
- blood pressure
- heart rate variability
- cell proliferation
- working memory
- left ventricular
- acute coronary syndrome
- small molecule
- single cell
- left atrial appendage
- oral anticoagulants
- quantum dots
- label free
- direct oral anticoagulants
- protein protein