Standing on a Scale Could Provide Non-Invasive Measure of Cardiovascular Health

Standing on a Scale Could Provide Non-Invasive Measure of Cardiovascular Health

Standing on a Scale Could Provide Non-Invasive Measure of Cardiovascular Health

New research at the University of Maryland (UMD) could provide a new, non-invasive way to monitor cardiac health monitoring, and it could be as simple as standing on a scale.

According to the American Heart Association, heart and cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death in the United States, and claims more lives that all forms of cancers combined, but work being led at the University of Maryland could help improve cardiovascular monitoring tools to help track health trends in patients earlier and less invasively.

Through new work published by graduate student Stephanie L. O. Martin, research associate Chang-Sei Kim and Assistant Professor Jin-Oh Hahn, along with colleagues from the Georgia Institute of Technology and Michigan State University, in Nature's Scientific Reports, the team demonstrates that they can effectively measure pulse transit time, a marker of cardiovascular health, using a specially modified weight scale more reliably than conventional pulse arrival time (PAT) measurements.

(A) Ballistocardiography (BCG) and foot photoplethysmography (PPG) waveforms were measured with a custom system similar to a weighing scale; ECG, finger PPG, and impedance cardiography (ICG) waveforms were measured with standard sensors; and a reference finger cuff BP waveform was measured with a volume-clamp device. (B) The waveforms were recorded during three baseline periods (R1, R2, R3) and three interventions (mental arithmetic (MA), cold pressor (CP), post-exercise (PE)) to increase BP but change the pre-ejection period (PEP) differently. (Source: Scientific Reports)

The team has spent the past several years exploring ways to mathematically model some of the human body's cardiac functions and create algorithms and tools aimed at both improving current cardiovascular monitoring tools—like blood pressure cuffs—and creating unobtrusive ways to monitor patient vitals as well as health and disease.

One of the important metrics to assess cardiovascular health and risk as well as blood pressure, pulse transit time (PTT), is the time it takes blood pressure wave to propagate from a proximal point, such as the heart, to a distal location, like the foot. PTT is affected by not only the distance the blood pressure wave travels, but also the stiffness of arterial walls. Since arterial stiffness has a correlation to cardiovascular health, differences for individuals and their transit times could help determine their overall cardiovascular health.

Most existing cuff-less blood pressure monitoring studies have used PAT measurements since PTT was not as convenient to measure as PAT. But through the use of specially modified scales, the team has demonstrated a method that shows the efficacy of using PTT in conjunction with ballistocardiograph (BCG) measurements. BCG measures cardiogenic movements that are very small movements in the body created by the displacement of blood as it flows outward from the heart through the arterial system. 

Their work represents the first steps towards developing an easier to use, non-invasive scale that could more effectively measure cardiovascular health than traditional blood pressure cuffs. The team's next steps are to bring the scale system into practice, and they believe that future versions could be used beyond the doctor's office, and be a part of home and gym scales to help monitor cardiac health.

This research was based on work supported by the National Institutes of Health.

Martin, S. L.-O., et al. Weighing Scale-Based Pulse Transit Time is a Superior Marker of Blood Pressure than Conventional Pulse Arrival Time. Nature Scientific Reports. 6, 39273; doi: 10.1038/srep39273 (2016)

Related Articles:
Jewell Leads Team in Advancing Multiple Sclerosis Research
Uncovering the mysteries of networking in the brain
Using Light to Attack Cancer
Maisel to Investigate Little-Known Organ in the Body
NIH Awards $2.8M Grant to Further Dementia Research
Jewell Lab Awarded Two NIH R01 Bioengineering Research Grants
Four BIOE Ph.D. Students Awarded NIH Fellowships
Three BIOE Professors Awarded NIH R01s in as Many Months
BIOE, ChBE Undergrads Develop Tools to Diagnose Alzheimer’s Disease before Patients Show Symptoms
University of Maryland to Lead NIH-Funded Center for Engineering Complex Tissues

December 16, 2016


Prev   Next

Current Headlines

Erika Moore Named a 2024 TED Fellow

ECE Ph.D. Student Wins UMD 3MT Competition

UMD Team Advances in NIST UAS 5.0 Competition, Wins Three Best in Class Awards

In Soft Robotics, Instability Can Be a Plus

When Vision Fails, a Suit Could Steer Pilots to Safety

JC Zhao Named Dean of University of Connecticut College of Engineering

Celebrating Asian, Pacific Islander, and Desi American Engineers

Four BIOE Terps Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search News

Archived News

Events Resources

Events Calendar