Smartphone Clip Developed To Measure Blood Pressure

Share:
blood pressure smartphone

The National Instituеу of Aging funded researchers at the University of California to develop a blood pressure smartphone clip. It is a low-cost, universal attachment to use with a smartphone, to measure blood pressure.

University of California, San Diego researchers developed “BPClip” to measure blood pressure at home. A plastic clip is attached to a smartphone camera. It is used with an app to measure blood pressure from the pulse at the user’s fingertip, as the finger presses into the clip.

The blood pressure smartphone clip needs not calibration

Other cuffless devices require calibration using blood pressure cuffs. BPClip does not. It uses instead a similar method to cuff-based monitors, measuring changes to the volume of blood that pulses as pressure is applied to an artery.

To test the measurement capability of BPClip, the researchers compared blood pressure measurements recorded by a standard arm cuff device to those recorded by BPClip. The 24 participants in this feasibility study, ranging in age from 18 to 56 years (age 30 on average), had blood pressure levels that ranged from low to high. Results using BPClip were comparable to those taken by a blood pressure cuff.

Limitations

Four additional participants were not included in the analysis, because they did not have enough blood circulation in their fingers to capture a strong pulse, even after using a hand warmer. This early study demonstrates the potential of smartphone-based blood pressure devices, which could help improve the accessibility of long-term blood pressure monitoring. A wide range of finger conditions, such as those that are callused, and fingers of many shapes and sizes, should also be included to determine how the accuracy of the device might be affected. Additionally, older adults may have trouble steadily pressing the clip and applying varied pressure. Next steps for BPClip include ensuring user-friendliness and accuracy across different skin tones.

This research was supported in part by NIA grant P30AG073107.

Reference: Xuan Y, et al. Ultra-low-cost mechanical smartphone attachment for no-calibration blood pressure measurement. Scientific Reports. 2023;13(1):8105. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-34431-1.

Return to 

Related News

Stay Informed with Our Daily News Digest!

Get Exclusive Content and Breaking News!

Follow us:
Hi, my name is Leo, do you have questions for me?

Stay Informed with Our Weekly Newsletter!

Get Exclusive Content and Breaking News Delivered to Your Inbox Daily!

Contact me

Get Exclusive Content and Breaking News Delivered to Your Inbox Daily!