Automated Remote Pulse Oximetry System (ARPOS)

Sensors (Basel). 2022 Jun 30;22(13):4974. doi: 10.3390/s22134974.

Abstract

Current methods of measuring heart rate (HR) and oxygen levels (SPO2) require physical contact, are individualised, and for accurate oxygen levels may also require a blood test. No-touch or non-invasive technologies are not currently commercially available for use in healthcare settings. To date, there has been no assessment of a system that measures HR and SPO2 using commercial off-the-shelf camera technology that utilises R, G, B, and IR data. Moreover, no formal remote photoplethysmography studies have been performed in real-life scenarios with participants at home with different demographic characteristics. This novel study addresses all these objectives by developing, optimising, and evaluating a system that measures the HR and SPO2 of 40 participants. HR and SPO2 are determined by measuring the frequencies from different wavelength band regions using FFT and radiometric measurements after pre-processing face regions of interest (forehead, lips, and cheeks) from colour, IR, and depth data. Detrending, interpolating, hamming, and normalising the signal with FastICA produced the lowest RMSE of 7.8 for HR with the r-correlation value of 0.85 and RMSE 2.3 for SPO2. This novel system could be used in several critical care settings, including in care homes and in hospitals and prompt clinical intervention as required.

Keywords: blood oxygenation level measurement; heart rate measurement; rPPG system; remote health monitoring.

MeSH terms

  • Face
  • Forehead
  • Humans
  • Oximetry* / methods
  • Oxygen
  • Photoplethysmography* / methods

Substances

  • Oxygen

Grants and funding

This research is funded by the School of Computer Science and by St Leonard’s Postgraduate College Doctoral Scholarship, both at the University of St Andrews for Pireh Pirzada’s PhD. Early work was funded by the Digital Health and Care Innovation Centre (DHI).