Abstract

Lung sounds acquired by stethoscopes are extensively used in diagnosing and differentiating respiratory diseases. Although an extensive know-how has been built to interpret these sounds and identify diseases associated with certain patterns, its effective use is limited to individual experience of practitioners. This user-dependency manifests itself as a factor impeding the digital transformation of this valuable diagnostic tool, which can improve patient outcomes by continuous long-term respiratory monitoring under real-life conditions. Particularly patients suffering from respiratory diseases with progressive nature, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, are expected to benefit from long-term monitoring. Recently, the COVID-19 pandemic has also shown the lack of respiratory monitoring systems which are ready to deploy in operational conditions while requiring minimal patient education. To address particularly the latter subject, in this article, we present a sound acquisition module which can be integrated into a dedicated garment; thus, minimizing the role of the patient for positioning the stethoscope and applying the appropriate pressure. We have implemented a diaphragm-less acousto-electric transducer by stacking a silicone rubber and a piezoelectric film to capture thoracic sounds with minimum attenuation. Furthermore, we benchmarked our device with an electronic stethoscope widely used in clinical practice to quantify its performance.

Highlights

  • Lung-related diseases such as pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and asthma impose heavy societal and economic burdens

  • To deal with the high source impedance, we have opted for a common-source junction field effect transistor (JFET)

  • [22] formulates referred the for input resistance should be as high as possible the parasitic capacitances should be that much noise a piezoelectric microphone interfaced with awhile field effect transistor (FET) and concludes lower than the piezoelectric sensor capacitance

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Summary

A Wearable Stethoscope for Long-Term Ambulatory

Gürkan Yilmaz 1, *, Michaël Rapin 1 , Diogo Pessoa 2 , Bruno M. Rocha 2 , Antonio Moreira de Sousa 1 , Roberto Rusconi 1 , Paulo Carvalho 2 , Josias Wacker 1 , Rui Pedro Paiva 2 and Olivier Chételat 1. Received: 2 August 2020; Accepted: 5 September 2020; Published: 8 September 2020

Introduction
Thoracic Sound Acquisition Module Design
Transducer Design
High-impedance sensor interface
Sensor acts
High-Impedance
Signal Conditioning and Quantization
Fabrication and Integration
Evaluation
Evaluation and Comparative Analysis
Magnitude spectra for position
Discussion and Conclusions
Figures and

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