Abstract

Wearable devices for continuous non-invasive blood pressure monitoring must be capable of providing a continuous waveform representative of arterial blood pressure. This paper establishes the distinctions in waveform morphology between wearable sensor modalities, specifically millimeter-wave radar and photoplethysmography, when compared to a reference continuous non-invasive blood pressure monitor. An analysis of a 115-subject dataset was conducted to assess waveform suitability. Millimeter-wave radar waveform morphology was found to more closely resemble continuous non-invasive blood pressure than photoplethysmography. Clinical Relevance- This paper compares the waveform morphology and content of signals from wearable sensors in the context of continuous non-invasive blood pressure monitoring.

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