Title: The Photoplethysmograph as an instrument for physiological measurement
1The Photoplethysmograph as an instrument for
physiological measurement
- Tomás Ward
- Department of Electronic Engineering,
- NUI Maynooth
2Overview
- What is the PPG?
- Common Uses of the PPG
- How we use the PPG
- How we intend to use the PPG
- Conclusion
3What is the Photoplethysmograph?
- The PPG is an optical means of conducting a
plethysmography. - So what is a plethysmography and how do we do it
optically?
4What is Plethysmography?
- PG is a term for a set of noninvasive techniques
for measuring volume changes in parts of the body
(even the whole body) - Commonly measured volume changes are
- those caused by breathing (lung and chest
expansion) - those caused by blood being forced into vessels
(such as arteries,veins and capillaries) - those caused in the heart as it pumps
5How are PGs commonly acquired ?
- The 2 main techniques are
- Volume Displacement Plethysmography
- Electrical Impedance Plethysmography
- The above two methods are flexible
- It is also possible to acquire a PG using
- Ultrasonic or X -Ray imaging
- A photoplethsymograph refers to a technique
whereby localised volume changes due to an
optically absorbant/scattering substance (e.g
.blood ) are measured.
6The PPG
- Usually the tissue under investigation is bathed
with light of a suitable wavelength (usally NIR)
and the resultant scattered light is measured
with a silicon photodiode - Two modes
- Transmissive mode - fingers / toes / earlobe
- Reflective - forehead / cheek
- Received signal is assumed to be a measure of
volume changes due to localised blood flow
7Common uses of the PPGThe Finger PPG
This signal is very similar to the peripheral
blood pressure waveform
8How does the PPG work?
- 15 of blood by weight is hemoglobin inside the
Red blood cells (RBC or Erythrocytes) - The total Hb (THb) can have one of the following
forms - reduced or non-oxygenated Hb (HbR)
- Oxyhemoglobin (HbO2)
- Carboxyhemoglobin (HbCO)
- Methemoglobin (metHb)
- How do these various forms interact with light?
9Optical measures from Radiative Tranfer theory - I
- Transmittance of light through an absorbing
medium is defined by - where I is the transmitted intensity and I0 is
the incident intensity. - Absorbance is given by
10Optical measures from Radiative tranfer theory -
II
It can be shown that the absorbance can be
further expressed as where ? is the molar
absorptivity (in cm-1 M-1), and l is the path
length (usually in cm), and c is the molar
concentration. This is known as Beers Law
11Optical Absorbance of HbR and HbO2 and H2O in
1cm cuvette vs ?
In cuvette obeys Beers Law ie we can relate I/I0
to c, ? and l In real blood Hb in erthrocytes
(RBCs) resulting in much scattering and
reflection by the RBC membranes and other tissues
12IR - LED
I0
Skin
Fat
Capilliary Bed
Arteriole
Venule
I
Transmissive PPG
Photodiode
13IR - LED
Photodiode
I0
I
Skin
Fat
Capilliary Bed
Arteriole
Venule
Reflective PPG
14So what really is the PPG a measure of?
- Hard to say! Literature unsatisfactory on the
subject - The name conventionally suggests that this device
should measure volume by optical methods. Really
it detects changes in blood perfusion in limbs
and tissues. - As arterial pulsations fill the capillary bed the
changes in volume of the blood vessels modify the
absorption, reflection and scattering of the
light. Also the amount of HbO changes resulting
in additional modulation. So the picture is more
complicated than Beer Lambert Law - As a raw signal it is best used to show the
timing of events such as heart beats, - With additional processing it can provide a
fairly accurate measure of relative peripheral
volume change and relative blood pressure change - Principle involved most useful for oximetry
15The use of a PPG for determining oxygen
saturation levels - Oximetry and Pulse Oximetry
- Oximetry is the determination of the oxygen
content of tissue blood - The measure used is oxygen saturation SpO2 which
is HbO/THb (as a percentage)
16Principle of Pulse Oximetry
- By using light at 2 different wavelengths one at
the isobestic wavelength we can determine the
ratio of HbO2 to HbR and hence local oxygen
levels (ideally!!)
17Probe - Transmissive
18Probe - Reflective
19Measures of the received signals are processed to
yield SpO2 values
20Practical Pulse Oximetry
- Due to scattering effects the actual output of a
pulse oximeter is not the linear function1 of
average SpO2 that theory predicts - Actual SpO2 is found via a lookup table
- For absolute measurement calibration with blood
sample required - Does show relative changes - still clinically
useful
1
Beer-Lambert Law
Vout normalised
Empirical Calibration
0
0 100 - SpO2
21Section Summary
- PPG produces a measure of blood perfusion changes
in a local area of tissue - Pulse Oximetry signal is produced using a PPG
calculated at two or more wavelengths and
provides a measure of SpO2 and hence relative
local oxygen consumption by tissue as a function
of time
22Our current use of the PPG
- Measurement of Pulse Transit Time (PTT)
- MEng work Michael Maguire
- Collaboration Diarmuid OShea, Leo Kevin,
Charles Markham - Assessment of vascular function
- New research
- Collaborators Michael Maguire, Douglas Leith,
Patricia Fitzgerald
23Measurement of Pulse Transit Time using the PPG
- What is PTT?
- Pulse transit time is the time an arterial
pressure wave takes to travel between two points
along the same artery. - Why measure PTT?
- Because it allows a noninvasive measurement of
arterial blood pressure - may also allow measurement of certain other
cardiovascular parameters noninvasively
24Direct Invasive Measurement of PTT
- Elastic Theory2 linear relationship Pulse Wave
Velocity and Diastolic BP - PTT decreases with increasing BP
PTT
PWV
25Conventional Noninvasive Measurement of Pulse
Transit Time using the ECG and finger PPG
26Typical Results (Geddes et al., 1981)
High scatter, averaging required for even
moderate accuracy Can we improve on this?
27Our Method of Measurement of Pulse Transit Time
- Direct measurement of PTT
- Brachial Reflective PPG replaces ECG
- Experiment Actual continuous BP taken with
Portapress system along with ECG - Allows PTT as measured using both methods to be
correlated with BP - Collaboration St Vincents Hospital
28Pulse Transit Time
- Improved result over ECG method
- Discrepancy between measures could be an
indicator of isovolumetric contraction
variablilty (C. Markham) - Integration of additional data (HR) may yield
improved relationship (Barschdorf et al.)
29Potential of Additional parameterization of
Peripheral Vascular system
- Currently looking at conducting step-response
measurements for assessing state of peripheral
vascular system - Occlude artery under investigation
- Rapidly allow blood back into arterial system
- Monitor PPG
- May yield information on compliance / arterial
narrowing - Collaboration Beaumont Hospital
30Future uses of the Photoplethysmograph in our
research - a Brain Computer Interface (BCI)
- Collaborators Charles Markham, Gary McDarby
- A BCI in the context we discuss here is a
wearable device that will allow a human user to
control their environment via thought processes
alone. - Next slides
- Why a BCI?
- And How.
31Why bother?
- There exist people with such profound
disabilities that they have NO means of
communicating with the outside world. - People with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and
brainstem stroke for example - The immediate goal is to provide these users, who
may be completely paralyzed or "locked in," with
basic communication capabilities so that they can
express their wishes to caregivers, operate
simple word processing programs, or even control
a neuroprosthesis.
32How should we proceed?
- Many severely disabled people can communicate
through the use of switches
No
Yes
Scanning Communication S/W
33Can we make a Mind Switch?
- Yes
- IF we can come up with a physiological
measurement modality that will allow different
neurological or thought processes to be
distinguished - Then if a user can voluntarily reproduce a
thought process we can measure noninvasively then
we have our Mind switch
34Current BCIs ( EEG-based )
- Are all based on electrical potentials
(electroencephalograph/EEG) recorded from the
scalp (25bits/min, long training) - Visual Evoked Potentials, P300, Slow Cortical
potentials, Sensorimotor Cortex Rhythms - Problems
- Long training times - non-intuitive
- Messy electrodes
- Signal averaging required
35EEG problems
- The EEG is a representation of groups of waves
produced by the electrical activity of the cortex
averaged at a given point. - EEG is a crude modality, akin to trying to
discern what is going on at a football game
through listening to the reactions of the crowd!! - We require an imaging modality allows us to see
the brain function related to its anatomy. - One such modality is Functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI)
36fMRI - basic principle
- Application of a large external magnetic field
causes magnetically active atomic nuclei to
become oriented parallel to the applied field. - This resting orientation may be disturbed with an
external RF (radio frequency) pulse. - After the RF pulse, the nuclei fall back in line
with the external magnetic field and, in so doing
reemit the radio-frequency energy as a signal
that can be detected by a receiver coil. The
frequency of this signal reflects number of
elements in the nucleus, the strength of the
external magnetic field, and the effect of
surrounding material. - fMRI is tuned to the magnetic properties of
hemoglobin and can distinguish HbO2 from HbR and
so can image neural activity which results in an
increase in local oxygen levels
37fMRI - principle more detail - I
- When neurons fire, they consume oxygen and this
causes the local oxygen levels to briefly
decrease and then actually increase above the
resting level as nearby capillaries dilate to
allow more oxygenated blood into the active area.
fMRI works by imaging blood oxygenation, a
technique called BOLD (Blood Oxygen Level
Dependence). The BOLD paradigm relies on brain
mechanisms which overcompensate for oxygen usage
(activation causes an influx of oxygenated blood
in excess of that used and therefore the local
oxyhemoglobin concentration increases.
38fMRI - principle more detail - II
- Oxygen is carried to the brain in the hemoglobin
molecules of red blood cells. Luckily for fMRI,
the magnetic properties of hemoglobin differ when
it is saturated with oxygen compared to when it
has given up oxygen. Technically, deoxygenated
haemoglobin is "paramagnetic" and thefore has a
short T2 relaxation time. As the ratio of
oxygenated to deoxygenated haemoglobin increases,
so to does the signal recorded by the MRI.
Deoxyhemoglobin increases the rate of
depolarization of hydrogen nuclei creating the
NMR signal thus decreases the intensity of the T2
image. The bottom line is that the intensity of
images increases with the increase of brain
activation. The problem is that this increase is
small (usually less than 2) and easily obscured
by noise and different artifacts.
39Moving fingers on right hand - the anatomy
Moving fingers on right hand - the fMRI image
40Typical patterns as you read this text!
41So why not just use fMRI?
- fMRI is highly sensitive to movement of the head
- the head must be clamped in place. - Subjects responses must not involve speaking and
at most only small movements etc. - Useful imaging still requires task repetition and
image averaging. - The MRI machine is very noisy and somewhat
claustrophobia-provoking. - The technique can induce heating of the brain.
- Very expensive (several million dollars)
- Large magnetic fields required (up to 4 Tesla)
- Not portable
42Alternative to fMRI Monitoring Cerebral Surface
activity with Near-Infrared imaging
- Use of oximetry approach (double PPG) at suitable
NIR wavelengths - Use an array of
- POX sensors
- Build up map of
- cortical neural activity
- Called Diffuse Optical Tomography
43Typical DOT system
44Right finger movement experiment as seen by DOT
system
45How DOT compares with other brain imaging
modalities
46Can we do this ?
- Wait and see
- Project is funded and will commence start of
April 2002
47Conclusion
- The PPG is a deceptively useful physiological
instrument - Last 12 months has spawned a number of
interesting experiments - Expect more useful applications in the future
48References 1 p397 in Noninvasive Instrumentation
and Measurement in Medical Diagnosis, Robert B
Northrop, CRC Press 2002, NUI Maynooth Library 2
Geddes, Hughes and Babbs, 1969 (reference
incomplete from Geddes Psychophysiology paper) 3
p241 in Noninvasive Instrumentation and
Measurement in Medical Diagnosis, Robert B
Northrop, CRC Press 2002, NUI Maynooth Library
49Partial Pressure
- John Dalton (1766-1844) - (gave us Dalton's
atomic theory) - The total pressure of a mixture of gases equals
the sum of the pressures that each would exert if
it were present alone - The partial pressure of a gas
- The pressure exerted by a particular component of
a mixture of gases
50Volume Plethysmography
- Simplest Example Measurement of limb volume
using pneumatic sphyganometer cuff - Inflated to P0 ltlt BPdiastolic
- If the limb expands against bladder by ?V
- it will cause ?PP0(?V/V0) allowing ?V to be
calculated3
51Impedance Plethysmography
- Usually ac current source (30-75kHz, high freq
has less physiological effect such as
electroshock lt1mA pk), impedance changes with
blood flow - Major applications
- occulsive impedance plethysmography used to
detect clots in deep leg veins - Measurement of depth of respiration and rate in
ICU (air intake varies impedance)
52Pulse Oximetry Theory - I
At 650nm (NIR) with concentration C and path
length L held constant the absorbitivity or
extinction coefficient varies with Saturation
percent of Hb as
Sp02Hb/THb
Also we can say
53Pulse Oximetry Theory - II
Beers Law
Br is the non-Hb absorption of tissues at 650nm
this light is converted to a proportional (Ka)
voltage before being fed through a log10(x)
nonlinearity (KL) to yield
VLrKLlog10(KaIor)KLlog10(KaI0)-KL(Br?rCL) VLrK
Llog10(KaI0)-KL(BrCL(?rmax-mSp02)) Now the light
from the 805 nm isobestic LED yields indepen
dent of SpO2
54Pulse Oximetry Theory - III
VLiKLlog10(KaI0)-KL(Bi) We subtract VLi from VLr
to get Vo Vo approx (SpO2)(KLCLm)KL(Bi-Br) ie
output is a linear fn of SpO2 but only if Beers
Law were to hold in fact output is a
monotonically inc. fn of SpO2