Nonlinear Viscoelastic Modeling of Finger Arteries: Toward Smartphone-Based Blood Pressure Monitoring via the Oscillometric Finger Pressing Method

IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2024 Apr 16:PP. doi: 10.1109/TBME.2024.3388316. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Oscillometric finger pressing is a smartphone-based blood pressure (BP) monitoring method. Finger photoplethysmography (PPG) oscillations and pressure are measured during a steady increase in finger pressure, and an algorithm computes systolic BP (SP) and diastolic BP (DP) from the measurements. The objective was to assess the impact of finger artery viscoelasticity on the BP computation.

Methods: Nonlinear viscoelastic models relating transmural pressure (finger BP - applied pressure) to PPG oscillations during finger pressing were developed. The output of each model to a measured transmural pressure input was fitted to measured PPG oscillations from 15 participants. A parametric sensitivity analysis was performed via model simulations to elucidate the viscoelastic effect on the derivative-based BP computation algorithm.

Results: A Wiener viscoelastic model comprising a first-order transfer function followed by a static sigmoidal function fitted the measured PPG oscillations better than an elastic model containing only the static function (median (IQR) error of 30.5% (25.6%-34.0%) vs 50.9% (46.7%-53.7%); p<0.01). In Wiener model simulations, the derivative algorithm underestimated SP, especially with high pulse pressure and low transfer function cutoff frequency (i.e., greater viscoelasticity). The mean of the normalized PPG waveform at the maximum oscillation beat was found to correlate with the cutoff frequency (r = -0.8) and could thus possibly be used to compensate for viscoelasticity.

Conclusion: Finger artery viscoelasticity negatively impacts oscillometric BP computation algorithms but can potentially be compensated for using available measurements.

Significance: These findings may help in converting smartphones into truly cuffless BP monitors for improving hypertension awareness and control.