Li Xiao, Dunn Jessilyn, Salins Denis, Zhou Gao, Zhou Wenyu, Schüssler-Fiorenza Rose Sophia Miryam, Perelman Dalia, Colbert Elizabeth, Runge Ryan, Rego Shannon, Sonecha Ria, Datta Somalee, McLaughlin Tracey, Snyder Michael P
Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States of America.
Mobilize Center, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2017 Jan 12;15(1):e2001402. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.2001402. eCollection 2017 Jan.
A new wave of portable biosensors allows frequent measurement of health-related physiology. We investigated the use of these devices to monitor human physiological changes during various activities and their role in managing health and diagnosing and analyzing disease. By recording over 250,000 daily measurements for up to 43 individuals, we found personalized circadian differences in physiological parameters, replicating previous physiological findings. Interestingly, we found striking changes in particular environments, such as airline flights (decreased peripheral capillary oxygen saturation [SpO2] and increased radiation exposure). These events are associated with physiological macro-phenotypes such as fatigue, providing a strong association between reduced pressure/oxygen and fatigue on high-altitude flights. Importantly, we combined biosensor information with frequent medical measurements and made two important observations: First, wearable devices were useful in identification of early signs of Lyme disease and inflammatory responses; we used this information to develop a personalized, activity-based normalization framework to identify abnormal physiological signals from longitudinal data for facile disease detection. Second, wearables distinguish physiological differences between insulin-sensitive and -resistant individuals. Overall, these results indicate that portable biosensors provide useful information for monitoring personal activities and physiology and are likely to play an important role in managing health and enabling affordable health care access to groups traditionally limited by socioeconomic class or remote geography.
新一代便携式生物传感器能够频繁测量与健康相关的生理指标。我们研究了利用这些设备监测人类在各种活动中的生理变化,以及它们在健康管理、疾病诊断和分析中的作用。通过记录多达43名个体每天超过250,000次的测量数据,我们发现了生理参数的个性化昼夜差异,重现了之前的生理学研究结果。有趣的是,我们发现在特定环境中会出现显著变化,比如乘坐飞机时(外周毛细血管血氧饱和度[SpO2]下降以及辐射暴露增加)。这些情况与疲劳等生理宏观表型相关,显示出在高空飞行中压力/氧气减少与疲劳之间存在紧密联系。重要的是,我们将生物传感器信息与频繁的医学测量相结合,并得出了两个重要发现:第一,可穿戴设备有助于识别莱姆病和炎症反应的早期迹象;我们利用这些信息开发了一个基于活动的个性化标准化框架,以便从纵向数据中识别异常生理信号,从而轻松检测疾病。第二,可穿戴设备能够区分胰岛素敏感个体和胰岛素抵抗个体之间的生理差异。总体而言,这些结果表明便携式生物传感器为监测个人活动和生理状况提供了有用信息,并且很可能在健康管理以及使传统上受社会经济阶层或偏远地理位置限制的群体能够获得负担得起的医疗保健方面发挥重要作用。