Monitoring long-term cardiac activity with contactless radio frequency signals

by Chen Yehong, University of Science and Technology of China

Monitoring long-term cardiac activity with contactless radio frequency signalsOverview of the proposed system. a Our system takes the RF signals reflected from the chest as input and outputs the real-time inter-beat interval (RT-IBI), which is then utilized to identify heart disease. b Schematic exploded-view of the RF device used in this paper. c Our system consists of three components: signal selection, beat frequency pattern extraction, and heart rate variability (HRV) estimation. Firstly, we introduce a signal selection algorithm to select a voxel point with abundant heartbeat information. Then, we decompose the signal into various frequency components and use high-frequency components to obtain the beat frequency pattern. Lastly, we extract heartbeat peaks from the pattern to calculate HRV. d The proposed system is evaluated under two scenarios: the outpatient scenario and the daily life scenario. e The proposed system is evaluated on three tasks, including monitoring HRV in large-scale outpatient settings, heartbeat abnormalities identification, and monitoring HRV in long-term daily life scenario. Credit: Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-55061-9

A research team led by Prof. Chen Yan at the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) has taken a leap forward in cardiovascular health monitoring. They have developed a non-invasive radio frequency (RF)-based system capable of monitoring heart rate variability (HRV) with clinical-grade accuracy over extended periods.

This research is published in Nature Communications.

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of death globally, claiming around 17.9 million lives annually. In China, an aging population has further heightened the prevalence and mortality rates of CVDs. Research shows that early diagnosis and intervention can effectively prevent many cases of cardiovascular illness.

However, existing detection techniques like electrocardiogram (ECG) and Holter are accurate but have drawbacks. The electrodes attached to the body in ECG and Holter can cause discomfort, making them unsuitable for long-term use. Wearable devices, while more convenient, are less accurate and vulnerable to environmental interference.

The RF–HRV system developed by the research team successfully overcomes the interference from respiratory motion in far-field conditions by analyzing RF signals. The system employs a signal selection algorithm to identify the signal rich in heartbeat information from multiple reflected signals. It uses the variational mode decomposition (VMD) algorithm to extract high-frequency components, obtaining clear and accurate heartbeat patterns.

By superimposing adjacent heartbeat harmonics, it generates specific heartbeat patterns with a frequency equal to the heart rate to calculate HRV.

Additionally, the researchers evaluated the system in a large-scale outpatient setting (with 6,222 participants) and a long-term daily life scenario (continuous multi-night sleep monitoring). The results show that in the outpatient scenario, the median real-time inter-beat interval (RT-IBI) error of the system is 26.1 milliseconds, and in the daily scenario, it is 34.1 milliseconds, which is a significant improvement compared to existing systems that extract signals only from the heart rate frequency band.

Moreover, the system performs well in the automatic classification of heartbeat abnormalities and is comparable to clinical-grade 12-lead ECG systems.

The innovation of this study lies in breaking the traditional signal processing framework. It utilizes previously unexplored high-frequency ranges (beyond 10-order heartbeat harmonics) to extract heartbeat signals, overcoming the interference of respiratory motion on heart rate monitoring.

More information: Bin-Bin Zhang et al, Monitoring long-term cardiac activity with contactless radio frequency signals, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-55061-9

Journal information:Nature Communications

Provided by University of Science and Technology of China


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