Physical Working Principles of Medical Radar

Forfatter
Aardal, Øyvind
Paichard, Yoann
Brovoll, Sverre
Berger, Tor
Lande, Tor Sverre
Hamran, Svein-Erik
Publisert
2013
Emneord
Ultralyd
Ekkokardiografi
Medisin
Radar
Modulasjon
Blod
Permalenke
https://ffi-publikasjoner.archive.knowledgearc.net/handle/20.500.12242/478
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2012.2228263
Samling
Articles
Description
Aardal, Øyvind; Paichard, Yoann; Brovoll, Sverre; Berger, Tor; Lande, Tor Sverre; Hamran, Svein-Erik. Physical Working Principles of Medical Radar. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering 2013 ;Volum 60.(4) s. 1142-1149
981926.pdf
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Sammendrag
There has been research interest in using radar for contactless measurements of the human heartbeat for several years. While many systems have been demonstrated, not much attention have been given to the actual physical causes of why this work. The consensus seems to be that the radar senses small body movements correlated with heartbeats, but whether only the movements of the body surface or reflections from internal organs are also monitored have not been answered definitely. There has recently been proposed another theory that blood perfusion in the skin could be the main reason radars are able to detect heartbeats. In this paper, an experimental approach is given to determine the physical causes. The measurement results show that it is the body surface reflections that dominate radar measurements of human heartbeats.
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