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Sunday, March 16, 2025

Checking blood pressure in a heartbeat, using AI and a camera

Monitoring blood pressure using a digital camera could soon be the norm, thanks to an innovative technique demonstrated by Australian and Iraqi researchers.

Using the same remote-health technology they pioneered to monitor vital health signs from a distance, engineers from the University of South Australia and Baghdadโ€™s Middle Technical University have designed a non-contact system to accurately measure systolic and diastolic pressure.
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It could replace the existing uncomfortable and cumbersome method of strapping an inflatable cuff to a patientโ€™s arm or wrist, the researchers claim.
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In a new paper published in Inventions, the researchers describe the technique, which involves filming a person from a short distance for 10 seconds and extracting cardiac signals from two regions in the forehead, using artificial intelligence algorithms.
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The systolic and diastolic readings were around 90 per cent accurate, compared to the existing instrument (a digital sphygmomanometer) used to measure blood pressure, that is itself subject to errors.
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Experiments were performed on 25 people with different skin tones and under changing light conditions, overcoming the limitations reported in previous studies.

โ€œMonitoring blood pressure is essential to detect and manage cardiovascular diseases, the leading cause of global mortality, responsible for almost 18 million deaths in 2019,โ€ UniSA remote sensing engineer Professor Javaan Chahl says.
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โ€œFurthermore, in the past 30 years, the number of adults with hypertension has risen from 650 million to 1.28 billion worldwide.
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โ€œThe health sector needs a system that can accurately measure blood pressure and assess cardiovascular risks when physical contact with patients is unsafe or difficult, such as during the recent COVID outbreak.
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โ€œIf we can perfect this technique, it will help manage one of the most serious health challenges facing the world today,โ€ Prof Chahl says.
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The cutting-edge technology has come a long way since 2017, when the UniSA and Iraqi research team demonstrated image-processing algorithms that could extract a humanโ€™s heart rate from drone video.
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In the past five years the researchers have developed algorithms to measure other vital signs, including breathing rates from 50 metres away, oxygen saturation, temperature, and jaundice in newborns.
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Their non-contact technology was also deployed in the United States during the pandemic to monitor for signs of COVID-19 from a distance.

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