6 February 2008—Hospitals, home patients, the elderly,
and even top athletes could benefit from a new
disposable wireless electronic patch designed to monitor
vital signs, according to researchers at Toumaz
Technology. Monday, at the IEEE International Solid
State Circuits Conference, in San Francisco, Toumaz
engineers described an ultralow-power system-on-chip
(SOC) that runs a wireless body-area network capable of
sensing temperature, heart rate, respiration,
electrocardiogram (ECG) signals, and other vital signs.
There are other wireless vital-signs monitors, says
Alison Burdett, director of technology at Toumaz, in
Abingdon, England, and a member of the Sensium
development team. None of the others, however, fit in an
ultrathin patch, are cheap enough to be disposable, and
consume as little power as Sensium does. “We aren’t
claiming a new paradigm,” she says. “But existing
systems are generally quite expensive and bulky, and
they need reasonable batteries. In that respect, our
system is state-of-the-art.”
The Sensium contains a wireless transceiver that
consumes just 2.6 milliamperes to transmit and 2.1 mA to
receive from a power supply of just under 1 volt. “A key
challenge we faced was to keep peak power consumption as
low as possible without sacrificing the integrity and
reliability of the data,” Burdett says. One way was to
integrate into the chip many systems and functions
usually done using power-consuming software. In addition
to the transceiver, the chip integrates a digital
controller, a temperature sensor, an interface for up to
three vital-signs sensors, and signal-processing
circuitry. The team also designed a custom
communications protocol, which responds quickly to weak
signals and assures data reliability.
The transceiver operates in the 862- to 870-megahertz
European Short-range Device (SRD) frequency bands and
the 902- to 928-MHz North American Industrial,
Scientific and Medical (ISM) bands. Up to eight
transceivers can connect on a single frequency to a base
station located in a hospital ward.
From there, data are forwarded to hospital computer
systems. “We developed software infrastructure up to a
certain point, allowing data to be put in a server,”
says Burdett. “We’re working with Oracle, which has
implemented a system for electronic
medical records.”
The Toumaz chip runs on a printed zinc-based battery
manufactured by Israel’s Power Paper. The battery is
very cheap, says Burdett, “and unlike lithium-based
batteries, it is environmentally friendly.” The battery
has a lifetime of around five days, a period after which
electronic patches generally begin to look old, irritate
the skin, and need to be replaced anyway, she adds.
The printed battery also contributes to the system’s
low cost. But mostly the cost is achieved by integrating
all the monitor’s functionality into a single 4
millimeter by 4 mm by 3 mm slice of silicon instead of
spreading it over several chips as other manufacturers
do, says Burdett. “It’s really the integration and
assembly that add to costs.” In addition to the
low-power chip, the vital-signs monitor patch includes
two or more noninvasive sensors and, depending on the
vital signs to be monitored, can be as small as 25 mm on
a side. Once the patch is mass-produced,
Burdett expects an initial price of
between US $5 and $10, and she expects
it will eventually fall below $5.
Toumaz has conducted clinical testing of the
vital-signs monitor chip, but the patch “still needs to
go through the safety check,” Burdett says. A commercial
launch date has not yet been set.