Wearable electronic mesh can help monitor heart health

Press Trust of India  |  Seoul 

Scientists have developed a soft mesh that can record signals from the heart and muscles, paving the way for a new generation of flexible

It is the first soft implant that can record the cardiac activity in multiple points of a swine heart, according to a study published in the journal

Researchers from the (IBS) in used the device on human skin to record the electrical activity of heart and muscles, that is electrocardiogram (ECG) and electromyogram (EMG) respectively.

Its softness, elasticity and stretchability, allows the device to follow the contours of flexible joints, such as the wrist.

Worn on a forearm, it simultaneously monitored EMG signals, and delivered electrical and/or thermal stimulations that could be employed in

The research team has also produced a customised large mesh that fits the lower part of a swine heart.

Wrapped around the heart, the implant can read signals from the entire organ to identify possible lesions and help recovery. For example, it was able to register the change of ECG signal caused by an

The mesh is stable during repetitive heart movements and does not interfere with the heart's pumping activity.

"Although various have been reported for the rat heart. This study on pigs can approximate human physiology more accurately," said Choi Suji, from IBS.

"We aim to study heart diseases, and stimulate the heart more effectively by synchronizing cardiac pumping activity," said Suji.

This stretchable and conductive patch is created by gold-coated silver nanowires mixed with a type of rubber, called polystyrene-butadiene-styrene (SBS).

Conventional silver wire-based conductive rubbers have had limited because silver is toxic to the body. The gold sheath prevents both silver's leaching, and corrosion caused by air and biological fluids, such as sweat.

"We took advantage of silver's high conductivity, SBS' stretchability, and gold's high biocompatibility," said Hyeon Taeghwan, from IBS.

"Finding the right proportion of each material was the key to success," Taeghwan said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, August 14 2018. 15:05 IST