The most commonly used stethoscopes in clinics nowadays are the acoustic stethoscopes. They operate on the transmission of sound from the chest piece, via air-filled hollow tubes, to the ears of the healthcare worker. However, even for very experienced healthcare workers, the accuracy of diagnosis of heart murmurs with acoustic stethoscope is limited by the poor ability of the human ears to low frequency heart sounds. This is important, as valuable information from subaudio sounds is present at frequencies below the human hearing range. Thus, the follow-up in-depth tests are needed in order to further distinguish different types of hear murmurs. In this paper, we report the development of a new type of stethoscope using laser technology to make the heartbeat signal “visible.” In this laser-based-stethoscope, the heartbeat signal is correlated with the optical spot from a laser beam reflected from the vibrating diaphragm attached to the patient’s chest skin. Vibration of the diaphragm is generated by the acoustic pressure from the heartbeat. The heartbeat signal is recorded from the movement of optical spot in time domain and it will be transformed to frequency domain to reveal more details on the heartbeat problems. Optical signal processing techniques will be applied to classify and analyze different types of heart murmurs from the visualized heart-sound patterns. This laser-based stethoscope will be helpful in reducing errors in heart-sound classification by practitioners. Additionally, the visual aspect of this stethoscope will provide subaudio (below the human hearing range) and images of sounds to the practitioner. The research results could provide better diagnosis of heart diseases and reduce unnecessary referrals. In the initial demonstration of the system presented in this paper, we set up the prototype of the optical system, in which we use a heart-sound box to simulate the chest of a human being. The movement of optical spot is detected by a linear position sensor and recorded by the USB data acquisition (DA) system. The heart-sound waves collected using iStethoscope Pro (the iPhone App) are applied to activate the vibration of the heart-sound box. With the optical system setup, we successfully acquired the visual display of the heartbeat signal in time domain based on the movement of the reflection spot from the laser beam.
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Design Of Medical Devices Conference Abstracts
Optical System Design of Laser-Based Stethoscope
Glenn Nordehn,
Glenn Nordehn
Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine,
Midwestern University
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Girum Sileshi,
Girum Sileshi
University of Minnesota Duluth
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Stanley Burns,
Stanley Burns
University of Minnesota Duluth
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Lorentz Wittmers,
Lorentz Wittmers
University of Minnesota Duluth
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Ron Ulseth
Ron Ulseth
Department of Engineering,
Itasca Community College
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Jing Bai
University of Minnesota Duluth
Glenn Nordehn
Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine,
Midwestern University
Girum Sileshi
University of Minnesota Duluth
Stanley Burns
University of Minnesota Duluth
Lorentz Wittmers
University of Minnesota Duluth
Ron Ulseth
Department of Engineering,
Itasca Community College
J. Med. Devices. Jun 2011, 5(2): 027522 (1 pages)
Published Online: June 13, 2011
Article history
Online:
June 13, 2011
Published:
June 13, 2011
Citation
Bai, J., Nordehn, G., Sileshi, G., Burns, S., Wittmers, L., and Ulseth, R. (June 13, 2011). "Optical System Design of Laser-Based Stethoscope." ASME. J. Med. Devices. June 2011; 5(2): 027522. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.3590692
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