Title :
Development of a biotelemetric heart valve monitor using a 2.45 GHz transceiver, microcontroller, A/D converter, and sensor gain amplifiers
Author :
Sears, Johnny R. ; Naber, John F.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Louisville Univ., KY, USA
Abstract :
The development of a fully implantable micromachined device that uses biotelemetry to monitor beat-to-beat aortic flow through artificial heart valves has been proposed. The purpose of this research was to design and build a large-scale circuit that could prove the feasibility of the essential concepts involved in such a device. The objectives were to demonstrate the ability to acquire and condition data signals with a microcontroller, show the capability to interface the microcontroller to a transceiver IC, RF transmit the acquired data to a PC, and successfully recreate the captured signals with the data received by the PC. The final design is composed of a PIC16C76 microcontroller, the MicroStamp Engine 2.45 GHz transceiver IC, and two AD620 low power instrumentation amplifiers. This is the highest frequency evaluated for a biotelemetry system known to the authors. The circuit performs an 8-bit A/D conversion on two input channels and serially relays the converted data to the MicroStamp Engine, which transmits the data to a PC at 2.45 GHz. The system was tested using triangular wave input signals of various frequencies and amplitudes. The results showed an average of 4.1% error per reproduced waveform
Keywords :
analogue-digital conversion; biomedical electronics; biomedical telemetry; blood flow measurement; cardiology; instrumentation amplifiers; microcontrollers; microsensors; patient monitoring; prosthetics; transceivers; 2.45 GHz; A/D converter; MicroStamp Engine; artificial heart valves; beat-to-beat aortic flow; biotelemetric heart valve monitor; fully implantable micromachined device; large-scale circuit; low power instrumentation amplifiers; microcontroller; pressure transducer; sensor gain amplifiers; transceiver; triangular wave input signals; Artificial heart; Biomedical telemetry; Engines; Frequency; Heart valves; Large-scale systems; Microcontrollers; RF signals; Radiofrequency integrated circuits; Transceivers;
Conference_Titel :
[Engineering in Medicine and Biology, 1999. 21st Annual Conference and the 1999 Annual Fall Meetring of the Biomedical Engineering Society] BMES/EMBS Conference, 1999. Proceedings of the First Joint
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5674-8
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.1999.803949