An openly available wearable, a diaper cover, monitors infant's respiration and position during rest and sleep

Acta Paediatr. 2021 Oct;110(10):2766-2771. doi: 10.1111/apa.15996. Epub 2021 Jun 26.

Abstract

Aim: To describe and test the accuracy of respiratory rate assessment in long-term surveillance using an open-source infant wearable, NAPping PAnts (NAPPA).

Methods: We recorded 24 infants aged 1-9 months using our newly developed infant wearable that is a diaper cover with an integrated programmable electronics with accelerometer and gyroscope sensors. The sensor collects child's respiration rate (RR), activity and body posture in 30-s epochs, to be downloaded afterwards into a mobile phone application. An automated RR quality measure was also implemented using autocorrelation function, and the accuracy of RR estimate was compared with a reference obtained from the simultaneously recorded capnography signal that was part of polysomnography recordings.

Results: Altogether 88 h 27 min of data were recorded, and 4147 epochs (39% of all data) were accepted after quality detection. The median of patient wise mean absolute errors in RR estimates was 1.5 breaths per minute (interquartile range 1.1-2.6 bpm), and the Blandt-Altman analysis indicated an RR bias of 0.0 bpm with the 95% limits of agreement of -5.7-5.7 bpm.

Conclusion: Long-term monitoring of RR and posture can be done with reasonable accuracy in out-of-hospital settings using NAPPA, an openly available infant wearable.

Keywords: home monitoring; infant sleep; medical wearable; respiratory rate; sleep monitoring.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Polysomnography
  • Respiration
  • Respiratory Rate*
  • Sleep
  • Wearable Electronic Devices*