Wearable Photoplethysmography for Cardiovascular Monitoring.
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Authors
Publication Date
2022-03-11Journal Title
Proc IEEE Inst Electr Electron Eng
ISSN
0018-9219
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Volume
110
Issue
3
Pages
355-381
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Charlton, P. H., Kyriaco, P. A., Mant, J., Marozas, V., Chowienczyk, P., & Alastruey, J. (2022). Wearable Photoplethysmography for Cardiovascular Monitoring.. Proc IEEE Inst Electr Electron Eng, 110 (3), 355-381. https://doi.org/10.1109/JPROC.2022.3149785
Description
Funder: Wellcome Trust
Abstract
Smart wearables provide an opportunity to monitor health in daily life and are emerging as potential tools for detecting cardiovascular disease (CVD). Wearables such as fitness bands and smartwatches routinely monitor the photoplethysmogram signal, an optical measure of the arterial pulse wave that is strongly influenced by the heart and blood vessels. In this survey, we summarize the fundamentals of wearable photoplethysmography and its analysis, identify its potential clinical applications, and outline pressing directions for future research in order to realize its full potential for tackling CVD.
Keywords
Sensor, Signal processing, Pulse Wave, Cardiovascular (Cv), Smartwatch, Photoplethysmogram (Ppg)
Sponsorship
This work was supported by British Heart Foundation grants
[PG/15/104/31913] and [FS/20/20/34626], the University of Cambridge
EPSRC Impact Acceleration Account, the Wellcome EPSRC
Centre for Medical Engineering at King’s College London
[WT 203148/Z/16/Z], the European COST ACTION-Network for
Research in Vascular Ageing CA18216 supported by COST
(European Cooperation in Science and Technology), and the
European Regional Development Fund (project No. 01.2.2-LMTK-
718-01-0030) under a grant agreement with the Research
Council of Lithuania (LMTLT). The authors acknowledge: financial
support from the Department of Health through the National Institute
for Health Research Cardiovascular MedTech Co-operative
at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust.
Funder references
British Heart Foundation (FS/20/20/34626)
Identifiers
35356509, PMC7612541
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/JPROC.2022.3149785
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/336659
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