Design, development, and evaluation of a contactless respiration rate measurement device utilizing a self-heating thermistor

Citation

Saatchi R, Holloway A, Travis J, et al., (2025) Design, development, and evaluation of a contactless respiration rate measurement device utilizing a self-heating thermistor. Technologies, Volume 13, Issue 6, June 2025, Article number 237

Abstract

The respiration rate (RR) is an important vital sign for early detection of health deterioration in critically unwell patients. Its current measurement has limitations, relying on visual counting of chest movements. The design of a new RR measurement device utilizing a self-heating thermistor is described. The thermistor is integrated into a hand-held air chamber with a funnel attachment to sensitively detect respiratory airflow. The exhaled respiratory airflow reduces the temperature of the thermistor that is kept at a preset temperature, and its temperature recovers during inhalation. A microcontroller provides signal processing, while its display screen shows the respiratory signal and RR. The device was evaluated on 27 healthy adult volunteers, with a mean age of 32.8 years (standard deviation of 8.6 years). The RR measurements from the device were compared with the visual counting of chest movements, and the contact method of inductance plethysmography that was implemented using a commercial device (SOMNOtouch™ RESP). Statistical analysis, e.g., correlations were performed. The RR measurements from the new device and SOMNOtouch™ RESP, averaged across the 27 participants, were 14.6 breaths per minute (bpm) and 14.0 bpm, respectively. The device has a robust operation, is easy to use, and provides an objective measure of the RR in a noncontact manner.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

40 Engineering, 4008 Electrical Engineering, Bioengineering, Lung, noncontact respiration rate measurement, digital healthcare device, medical electronics, medical devices, medical engineering

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Funder/s

This research was funded by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR), United Kingdom, scheme Invention for Innovation (i4i), Reference: II-LB-0712-20004.

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