Title :
Wireless micromanometer system for chronic bladder pressure monitoring
Author :
Fletter, Paul C. ; Majerus, Steve ; Cong, Peng ; Damaser, Margot S. ; Ko, Wen H. ; Young, Darrin J. ; Garverick, Steven L.
Author_Institution :
Adv. Platform Technol. Center, L. Stokes Cleveland VA Med. Center, Cleveland, OH, USA
Abstract :
This paper describes a wireless system to monitor urinary bladder pressure comprising an implantable device with an external receiver and wireless battery charger. The device is intended to be implanted within the bladder wall, sealed behind the urothelial lining. This location is protected from the urine stream, thus avoiding mineral encrustation and stone formation, and is suitable to measure intravesical pressure in chronic applications. The implant is dimensionally designed to gain access to the bladder using conventional urological tools, e.g. a cystoscope. The active circuit implant features a custom application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), rechargeable battery and wireless telemetry. Inductive charging, novel power management schemes and innovative packaging allow this device to be inserted through the urethra, implanted within the bladder wall, and operate for a lifetime of up to 10 years.
Keywords :
bioMEMS; biomedical electronics; biomedical measurement; biomedical telemetry; diseases; patient monitoring; pressure measurement; active circuit implant; bladder wall; chronic applications; chronic bladder pressure monitoring; custom application-specific integrated circuit; cystoscope; external receiver; implantable device; inductive charging; intravesical pressure; power management schemes; rechargeable battery; urinary bladder pressure; urine stream; urological tools; urothelial lining; wireless battery charger; wireless micromanometer system; wireless telemetry; Active circuits; Application specific integrated circuits; Battery charge measurement; Bladder; Implants; Integrated circuit measurements; Minerals; Monitoring; Pressure measurement; Protection; implantable biomedical devices; pressure measurement; submucosa; telemetry; urinary system; wireless sensors;
Conference_Titel :
Networked Sensing Systems (INSS), 2009 Sixth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Pittsburgh, PA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6313-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6314-5
DOI :
10.1109/INSS.2009.5409917