Title :
A Technique to Measure Eyelid Pressure Using Piezoresistive Sensors
Author :
Shaw, Alyra J. ; Davis, Brett A. ; Collins, Michael J. ; Carney, Leo G.
Author_Institution :
Contact Lens & Visual Opt. Lab., Queensland Univ. of Technol. (QUT), Brisbane, QLD, Australia
Abstract :
In this paper, novel procedures were developed using a thin (0.17 mm) tactile piezoresistive pressure sensor mounted on a rigid contact lens to measure upper eyelid pressure. A hydrostatic calibration system was constructed, and the influence of conditioning (prestressing), drift (continued increasing response with a static load), and temperature variations on the response of the sensor were examined. To optimally position the sensor-contact lens combination under the upper eyelid margin, an in vivo measurement apparatus was constructed. Calibration gave a linear relationship between raw sensor output and actual pressure units for loads between 1 and 10 mmHg (R 2 = 0.96 ). Conditioning the sensor prior to use regulated the measurement response, and sensor output stabilized about 10 s after loading. While sensor output drifts slightly over several hours, it was not significant beyond the measurement time of 1 min used for eyelid pressure. The error associated with calibrating at room temperature but measuring at ocular surface temperature led to a very small overestimation of pressure. Eyelid pressure readings were observed when the upper eyelid was placed on the sensor, and removed during a recording. When the eyelid pressure was increased by pulling the lids tighter against the eye, the readings from the sensor significantly increased.
Keywords :
biomedical measurement; eye; piezoresistive devices; pressure sensors; pressure measurement; pressure sensor; rigid contact lens; room temperature; temperature 293 K to 298 K; thin tactile piezoresistive sensor; upper eyelid; Calibration; Eyelids; Lenses; Piezoresistance; Position measurement; Pressure measurement; Sensor systems; Tactile sensors; Temperature sensors; Time measurement; Eyelid pressure; measurement; piezoresistive sensors; Calibration; Contact Lenses; Eyelids; Humans; Linear Models; Monitoring, Physiologic; Pressure; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Temperature;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2009.2022550