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    Stick-on patch proposed for patient monitoring

    WASHINGTON (AP) — One day monitoring a patient's vital signs like temperature and heart rate could be a simple as sticking on a tiny, wireless patch, sort of like a temporary tattoo.

    Eliminating the bulky wiring and electrodes used in current monitors would make the devices more comfortable for patients, says an international team of researchers who report their findings in Friday's edition of the journal Science.

    "What we are trying to do here is to really reshape and redefine electronics ... to look a lot more like the human body, in this case the surface layers of the skin," said John A. Rogers of the University of Illinois. "The goal is really to blur the distinction between electronics and biological tissue."

    The researchers embedded electronic sensors in a film thinner than the diameter of a human hair, which was placed on a polyester backing like those used for the temporary tattoos popular with kids. The result was a sensor that was flexible enough to move with the skin and would adhere without adhesives.

    The researchers said the devices had remained in place for up to 24 hours. Rogers said in an briefing that, while normal shedding of skin cells would eventually cause the monitors to come off, he thought they could remain in place as long as two weeks.

    In addition to monitoring patients in hospitals, other uses for the devices could include monitoring brain waves, muscle movement, sensing the larynx for speech, emitting heat to help heal wounds and perhaps even being made touch sensitive and placed on artificial limbs, Rogers said.

    The device will help fill the need for equipment that is more convenient and less stressful for patients, permitting easier and more reliable monitoring, said Zhenqiang Ma, an engineering professor at the University of Wisconsin, who was not part of the research team. The electronic skin can simply be stuck on or peeled off like an adhesive bandage, he noted in a commentary on the report.

    Rogers is a founder of the company MC10, based in Cambridge, Mass., which is working to develop commercial uses of the devices, but he declined to speculate on how soon the electronic skin would be ready for market or what it would cost.

    The monitor looks rather like a bandage and contains an antenna that could be used to transmit data, though a radio to do that transmitting has not yet been tested, Rogers said.

    The current design has a small coil and could be powered by induction — by placing it near an electrical coil — Rogers said. That would permit intermittent use, he said, and for longer-term monitoring a tiny battery or storage capacitor could be used.

    The monitor doesn't use an adhesive, relying on a weak force called the van der Waals force that causes molecules and surfaces to stick together without interfering with motion. The ability of geckos to climb smooth surfaces has been attributed to the van der Waals force. For longer-term use the electronic skin could be coated with an adhesive.

    Rogers and co-lead author Dae-Hyuong Kim, have been working on the technology for several years. They earlier worked together to develop flexible electronics for hemispherical camera sensors and other devices that have complex shapes.

    Funding for the research came from the Air Force Research Laboratory, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Energy, the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois, and a Defense Department National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellowship.

    ___

    Online:

    Science: http://www.sciencemag.org

     

    65 comments

    • oldman  •  9 mths ago
      It would be worth it not to wear that stupid thing on your finger and have a nurse waking you every 45 minutes to take vital signs.
    • Skye  •  9 mths ago
      I think it's good news. Trying to sleep with a heart monitor on is impossible. It's likely to be cheaper to manufacture - smaller,poorer countries can benefit from new technology. Right now the Holter monitors are clumsy and most of the 30 day event monitors require a land line phone. Most people don't have land line phones, especially in rural areas. This will also be a big help to first responders, many ambulances do not have advanced heart equipment for patients. Older patients nowadays often have multiple complex conditions that need long term monitoring. Infants, especially premature infants could benefit as well. I'm sure veterinarians and zoo keepers could use such technology, it would be easier on the animals especially the ones that must be tranquilized in order to be examined.
    • Steve  •  9 mths ago
      I speak from experience, I have been hospitalized a number of times for blood clots due to a clotting disorder, even in ICU, I can tell you contact between medical staff (nurses, aids, whatever) is at a bare minimum in any hospital. I have been all over this country with this problem, at least when someone comes in to take my blood pressure and temp, there is some human contact, this device will eliminate that little contact that you do get, I would have to vote no for any type of monitor such as this.
      • Jeremy 9 mths ago
        You raise a good point. There is absolutely minimal contact with nurses and staff while one is a patient in the hospital. I wonder if stress would go up among patients or if healing would take longer with this device in use.
      • zsailor1 9 mths ago
        I speak from appearance and I know for sure that having all those wires connected are a pain. Until you get out of icu and into general recovery you are connected to a machine with them. After that you carry a battery around with you to power the things and transmit the data to the nurses station or where ever it is they do the monitoring. When one of the wires comes loose because you turned over or moved the wrong way or got hot and sweated the nurse comes in and wakes you up while finding the one that came unstuck. Now if they could just find a way to run an iv into you without hanging it on that thing with wheels. If you need to talk to a nurse all you have to do is push the call button and eventually one will show up.
      • Denae 9 mths ago
        It might just be that hospitals are understaffed. Everyone I've been to had nurses popping in every few hours. They would still have to check you. You just wouldn't be hooked up to machines.
    • A  •  9 mths ago
      Hah this is nothing one day a tiny device will be implanted inside the liver and either produce or direct the liver to produce all of the medications necessary to keep the patient healthy. It will monitor blood sugars and pressure and control both all by itself. Such a device may even control the immune system instruct cancer cells to self destruct. one may never even know he or she is diabetic or hypertensive or had a few active cancer cells that were asked to self destruct. This device will be a prophylactic implant
      • whodaevathunk 9 mths ago
        At least you have a good imagination, and, your right.
        The uses are almost limitless.
        Unfortunately, the little devil can, and will be used in ways that are not to the benefit of the person wearing it.
    • Ed  •  9 mths ago
      Zephyr makes a monitor that can do heart rate, EKG, body temperature, breathing rate (possibly volume as well, I don't remember). This appears to have the same effect in a smaller package. Ideally They could make it last longer (make it bigger?) and use it to monitor higher risk people outside of a hospital. I would think normal equipment is more effective inside the hospital...but day to day life is where a monitor like this is useful.
    • Centrist  •  9 mths ago
      Patients in nursing homes and hospitals, the incoherent, the home-care people - all will benefit by better monitoring. The type that can call help immediately when a condition changes. Love it, because I know full well the benefits it can bring.
      • Jo5329 9 mths ago
        I agree! My MIL is currently in a rehab/rest home and this would help those poor ladies greatly checking on the more mobile patients, so they could have more time for the more needy!!!
    • Deep Thought  •  9 mths ago
      Cool technology. Now I wonder how long it will be before some loon claims this is the mark of the beast in Revelation.
      • Darkangel 9 mths ago
        You should change you post name to religion hater.
      • Jeremy 9 mths ago
        There's a comment or two above that mentions this.
      • TrueColors35 9 mths ago
        often they get people use to a idea break down your defences then move in with the BIG guns after your broken into
    • Wombat  •  9 mths ago
      Get a life people! This is a fantastic breakthrough! If you have ever been hospitalized you will remember just how 'tied down' you feel. Anything that helps the patient is a move forward. For those of you who think that this is the 'mark of the devil' I have a nice cold rectal thermometer for you!
    • Lilly White  •  9 mths ago
      This is NOT the Mark of the Beast. This WILL be wastefull, as in having to be replaced every time sweat, spilled drinks or any other body fluid reaches it. Jack up the cost of having a sticker replaced not to mention what is recording these vitals? Is it going into an expensive central machine or are they relying on staff to record the reading? The Mark will be scanable-this is not. The Mark will have all of your personal info. This does not. Your bank account and ATM card are a little closer to the Mark and I bet you have one.
    • RobertA  •  9 mths ago
      Funding for the research came from the Feds so there should not be a private company patenting this. It seems to me that if the Fed pays for something we should not have to pay typical bloated prices...I know I'm not thinking right.
      • disconnected 9 mths ago
        i guess i'm not thinking right either...
    • GeorgeL  •  9 mths ago
      Great Science!! Bigest worry is who has access to this information. Intercepting vultures? Hackers? OOhh!! Let's Pray. Radio transmits in 3-D.
    • Denae  •  9 mths ago
      How cool is that?! I wonder how cost effective they can be? Don't be ignorant and try to relate this to something negative/Biblical. This is advancing healthcare and science...it's not like a bar code or a tracking device.
    • T Money  •  9 mths ago
      This product is not going to make anything better. It is just another way for the goverment to track you in the end. Doesn't anybody care about their rights as an American Citizen? Why are so many blind to what is actually happening here?
    • David Hammond  •  9 mths ago
      This is nice in theory, but we all know that once this goes out on the market they will charge the hospitals an arm and a leg for their product. It will never make it.
    • DontTeaOnMe  •  9 mths ago
      Great engineering!
    • J.  •  9 mths ago
      It is a nice idea But, people like me cannot have ANY plastic touching my skin for any length of time. I recently wore a morphine patch for pain. It was designed to wear for 7 days.
      It worked great until I put on the second one. I have a bad reaction to the plastic and had a sore on my arm that lasted over a month. I now have to do pills. Again it works great. Thank God. Although it would be more beneficial to wear a patch.
    • Evergreen2U  •  9 mths ago
      Wonderful if you have insurance or Medicare or can afford the money to see a doctor. Millions of us don't have healthcare coverage as it is....and there is a lot of stuff going on to see that Medicare is also cut.
    • Raccoon City Survivor  •  9 mths ago
      We are Borg.......
    • TrendyT  •  9 mths ago
      Hence starts the mark of the beast. Don't do it America!
    • Mark  •  9 mths ago
      Interesting, except insurance companies will not pay hospitals for devices that are not medically necessary. (the corded machines are functional) Ever wonder why non-essential medication (IV drip) beeps and the patient has to page the nurse? Now you know.
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