Title :
Towards BirthAlert—A Clinical Device Intended for Early Preterm Birth Detection
Author :
Etemadi, Mozziyar ; Chung, Pau-Choo ; Heller, J. Alex ; Liu, Jonathan A. ; Rand, Larry ; Roy, Sandip
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Bioeng. & Therapeutic Sci., Univ. of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA
Abstract :
Preterm birth causes 1 million infant deaths worldwide every year, making it the leading cause of infant mortality. Existing diagnostic tests such as transvaginal ultrasound or fetal fibronectin either cannot determine if preterm birth will occur in the future or can only predict the occurrence once cervical shortening has begun, at which point it is too late to reverse the accelerated parturition process. Using iterative and rapid prototyping techniques, we have developed an intravaginal proof-of-concept device that measures both cervical bioimpedance and cervical fluorescence to characterize microstructural changes in a pregnant woman´s cervix in hopes of detecting preterm birth before macroscopic changes manifest in the tissue. If successful, such an early alert during this “silent phase” of the preterm birth syndrome may open a new window of opportunity for interventions that may reverse and avoid preterm birth altogether.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; biological organs; biological tissues; biomedical equipment; electric impedance; fluorescence; gynaecology; iterative methods; obstetrics; BirthAlert; accelerated parturition process; cervical bioimpedance; cervical fluorescence; cervical shortening; clinical device; diagnostic testing; early preterm birth detection; fetal fibronectin; infant mortality; intravaginal proof-of-concept device; iterative techniques; macroscopic changes; microstructural changes; pregnant woman cervix; preterm birth syndrome; rapid prototyping techniques; silent phase; tissue; transvaginal ultrasound; Biomedical measurement; Electrodes; Fluorescence; Impedance; Impedance measurement; Probes; Softening; Bioimpedance; bluetooth; fluorescence; physiologic sensing; sensors; spectroscopy;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2013.2272601