Title :
Digital Heart-Rate Variability Parameter Monitoring and Assessment ASIC
Author :
Massagram, W. ; Hafner, N. ; Mingqi Chen ; Macchiarulo, L. ; Lubecke, Victor M. ; Boric-Lubecke, O.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Technol., Naresuan Univ., Phitsanulok, Thailand
Abstract :
This paper describes experimental results for an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), designed for digital heart rate variability (HRV) parameter monitoring and assessment. This ASIC chip measures beat-to-beat (RR) intervals and stores HRV parameters into its internal memory in real time. A wide range of short-term and long-term ECG signals obtained from Physionet was used for testing. The system detects R peaks with millisecond accuracy, and stores up to 2 min of continuous RR interval data and up to 4 min of RR interval histogram. The prototype chip was fabricated in a 0.5 ??m complementary metal-oxide semiconductor technology on a 3??3 mm2 die area, with a measured dynamic power consumption of 10 ??W and measured leakage current of 2.62 nA. The HRV monitoring system including this HRV ASIC, an analog-to-digital converter, and a low complexity microcontroller was estimated to consume 32.5 ??V, which is seven times lower power than a stand-alone microcontroller performing the same functions. Compact size, low cost, and low power consumption make this chip suitable for a miniaturized portable HRV monitoring system.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; application specific integrated circuits; biomedical electronics; electrocardiography; leakage currents; microcontrollers; patient monitoring; Physionet; analog-to-digital converter; application-specific integrated circuit; assessment ASIC chip; complementary metal-oxide semiconductor technology on; current 2.62 nA; digital heart-rate variability parameter monitoring; dynamic power consumption; leakage current; long-term ECG signals; low complexity microcontroller; power 10 muW; short-term ECG signals; size 0.5 mum; voltage 32.5 muV; Application specific integrated circuits; Area measurement; Condition monitoring; Current measurement; Energy consumption; Heart rate measurement; Heart rate variability; Microcontrollers; Power measurement; Semiconductor device measurement; Biomedical measurements; beat-to-beat (RR) interval; biomedical monitoring; electrocardiography; heart-rate variability (HRV);
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2009.2035555