mCardiacDx: Radar-Driven Contactless Monitoring and Diagnosis of Arrhythmia
By: Arjun Kumar , Noppanat Wadlom , Jaeheon Kwak and more
Potential Business Impact:
Detects heart problems without touching you.
Arrhythmia is a common cardiac condition that can precipitate severe complications without timely intervention. While continuous monitoring is essential for timely diagnosis, conventional approaches such as electrocardiogram and wearable devices are constrained by their reliance on specialized medical expertise and patient discomfort from their contact nature. Existing contactless monitoring, primarily designed for healthy subjects, face significant challenges when analyzing reflected signals from arrhythmia patients due to disrupted spatial stability and temporal consistency. In this paper, we introduce mCardiacDx, a radar-driven contactless system that accurately analyzes reflected signals and reconstructs heart pulse waveforms for arrhythmia monitoring and diagnosis. The key contributions of our work include a novel precise target localization (PTL) technique that locates reflected signals despite spatial disruptions, and an encoder-decoder model that transforms these signals into HPWs, addressing temporal inconsistencies. Our evaluation on a large dataset of healthy subjects and arrhythmia patients shows that both mCardiacDx and PTL outperform state-of-the-art approach in arrhythmia monitoring and diagnosis, also demonstrating improved performance in healthy subjects.
Similar Papers
Design and Measurements of mmWave FMCW Radar Based Non-Contact Multi-Patient Heart Rate and Breath Rate Monitoring System
Systems and Control
Monitors many people's breathing and heart rates.
Design and Measurements of mmWave FMCW Radar Based Non-Contact Multi-Patient Heart Rate and Breath Rate Monitoring System
Systems and Control
Measures heart and breathing rates of many people.
Advancing Remote and Continuous Cardiovascular Patient Monitoring through a Novel and Resource-efficient IoT-Driven Framework
Networking and Internet Architecture
Helps doctors watch heart health from afar.