Health

Using Artificial Intelligence to Check Blood Pressure in a Heartbeat

Using Artificial Intelligence to Check Blood Pressure in a Heartbeat

Engineers at the University of South Australia have created a system for remotely measuring blood pressure by filming a person’s forehead and extracting cardiac signals with artificial intelligence algorithms. Engineers from the University of South Australia and Baghdad’s Middle Technical University have developed a non-contact system to accurately measure systolic and diastolic pressure using the same remote-health technology they pioneered to monitor vital health signs from a distance.

It could replace the existing uncomfortable and cumbersome method of strapping an inflatable cuff to a patient’s arm or wrist, the researchers claim.

In a new paper published in Inventions, the researchers describe the technique, which involves filming a person from a short distance for 10 seconds and extracting cardiac signals from two regions in the forehead, using artificial intelligence algorithms.

Monitoring blood pressure is essential to detect and manage cardiovascular diseases, the leading cause of global mortality, responsible for almost 18 million deaths in 2019.

Professor Javaan Chahl

The systolic and diastolic readings were around 90 percent accurate, compared to the existing instrument (a digital sphygmomanometer) used to measure blood pressure, which is itself subject to errors. Experiments were performed on 25 people with different skin tones and under changing light conditions, overcoming the limitations reported in previous studies.

“Monitoring blood pressure is essential to detect and manage cardiovascular diseases, the leading cause of global mortality, responsible for almost 18 million deaths in 2019,” UniSA remote sensing engineer Professor Javaan Chahl says.

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Checking blood pressure in a heartbeat, using artificial intelligence

“Furthermore, in the past 30 years, the number of adults with hypertension has risen from 650 million to 1.28 billion worldwide. The health sector needs a system that can accurately measure blood pressure and assess cardiovascular risks when physical contact with patients is unsafe or difficult, such as during the recent COVID outbreak. If we can perfect this technique, it will help manage one of the most serious health challenges facing the world today,” Prof Chahl says.

The cutting-edge technology has come a long way since 2017 when the UniSA and Iraqi research team demonstrated image-processing algorithms that could extract a human’s heart rate from drone video.

In the past five years, researchers have developed algorithms to measure other vital signs, including breathing rates from 50 meters away, oxygen saturation, temperature, and jaundice in newborns. Their non-contact technology was also deployed in the United States during the pandemic to monitor for signs of COVID-19 from a distance.