Jankovic Matija, Kang Seungmin, Bhattacharya Sarnab, Kashanchi Jordon, Wang Jieting, Deoli Kanika, Huang Tianda, Johnson Alex, Ambani Karina, Kim Sangjun, Wang Pulin, Coyle Edward, Lu Nanshu
Chandra Family Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Jul 22;122(29):e2504278122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2504278122. Epub 2025 Jul 14.
Assessment of whole-body hydration (WBH) is crucial for health management and disease diagnosis. Traditional methods are invasive or require bulky equipment, making them impractical for mobile, continuous sensing. We present a wearable bioimpedance sensor with strategic electrode placement across the arm for noninvasive, continuous, and mobile WBH monitoring. Although whole-body bioimpedance is a proven method for indicating WBH, the effectiveness of local bioimpedance measurement has been unclear. Our finite element analysis demonstrated that with an optimized cross-arm sensing configuration, a strong linear relationship exists between arm bioimpedance and muscle electrical resistivity, confirming the utility of arm bioimpedance for assessing WBH given the well-established relationship between muscle electrical resistivity and body water. Our IRB-approved diuretic-induced dehydration study demonstrated a strong linear correlation between the increase of arm bioimpedance and the decrease in body weight due to water loss, with a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.956 ± 0.033 among eight participants. Arm and whole-body demonstrated strong alignment, suggesting that arm bioimpedance measurements can reflect not only changes in WBH but also potentially absolute WBH status when compared against established population reference data. In a 24-h free-living experiment, the wireless, dry electrode-based, arm-conformable bioimpedance sensor continuously tracked dehydration and rehydration despite motions associated with daily activities. These results suggest that properly measured arm bioimpedance can serve as a surrogate for WBH, offering a reliable and accessible solution. The potential uses of this wearable technology range from improving personal wellness to enhancing professional sports and occupational safety.
评估全身水合作用(WBH)对于健康管理和疾病诊断至关重要。传统方法具有侵入性或需要笨重的设备,这使得它们对于移动、连续传感来说不切实际。我们展示了一种可穿戴生物阻抗传感器,其电极在手臂上进行了战略性布置,用于无创、连续和移动的WBH监测。尽管全身生物阻抗是一种已被证实的指示WBH的方法,但局部生物阻抗测量的有效性尚不清楚。我们的有限元分析表明,通过优化的跨臂传感配置,手臂生物阻抗与肌肉电阻率之间存在很强的线性关系,鉴于肌肉电阻率与身体水分之间已确立的关系,这证实了手臂生物阻抗在评估WBH方面的实用性。我们经机构审查委员会(IRB)批准的利尿剂诱导脱水研究表明,手臂生物阻抗的增加与因水分流失导致的体重下降之间存在很强的线性相关性,八名参与者的皮尔逊相关系数为0.956±0.033。手臂和全身表现出很强的一致性,这表明与既定的人群参考数据相比,手臂生物阻抗测量不仅可以反映WBH的变化,还可能反映绝对的WBH状态。在一项24小时自由生活实验中,基于无线、干电极且贴合手臂的生物阻抗传感器,尽管存在与日常活动相关的运动,仍能持续跟踪脱水和补液情况。这些结果表明,正确测量的手臂生物阻抗可以作为WBH的替代指标,提供一种可靠且易于获得的解决方案。这种可穿戴技术的潜在用途范围广泛从改善个人健康到提升职业体育和职业安全。