IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine (Jan 2024)

Treatment of Nocturnal Enuresis Using Miniaturised Smart Mechatronics With Artificial Intelligence

  • Kaya Kuru,
  • Darren Ansell,
  • Dave Hughes,
  • Benjamin Jon Watkinson,
  • Fabrizio Gaudenzi,
  • Martin Jones,
  • David Lunardi,
  • Noreen Caswell,
  • Adela Rabella Montiel,
  • Peter Leather,
  • Daniel Irving,
  • Kina Bennett,
  • Corrin McKenzie,
  • Paula Sugden,
  • Carl Davies,
  • Christian Degoede

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JTEHM.2023.3336889
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. 204 – 214

Abstract

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Our study was designed to develop a customisable, wearable, and comfortable medical device – the text so-called “MyPAD” that monitors the fullness of the bladder, triggering an alarm indicating the need to void, in order to prevent badwetting – i.e., treating Nocturnal Enuresis (NE) at the text pre-void stage using miniaturised mechatronics with Artificial Intelligence (AI). The developed features include: multiple bespoke ultrasound (US) probes for sensing, a bespoke electronic device housing custom US electronics for signal processing, a bedside alarm box for processing the echoed pulses and generating alarms, and a phantom to mimic the human body. The validation of the system is conducted on the text tissue-mimicking phantom and volunteers using Bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory Recurrent Neural Networks (Bi-LSTM-RNN) and Reinforcement Learning (RL). A Se value of 99% and a Sp value of 99.5% with an overall accuracy rate of 99.3% are observed. The obtained results demonstrate successful empirical evidence for the viability of the device, both in monitoring bladder expansion to determine voiding need and in reinforcing the continuous learning and customisation of the device for bladder control through consecutive uses. Clinical impact: MyPAD will treat the NE better and efficiently against other techniques currently used (e.g., post-void alarms) and will i) replace those techniques quickly considering sufferers’ condition while being treated by other approaches, and ii) enable children to gain control of incontinence over time and consistently have dry nights. Category: Early/Pre-Clinical Research

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