Nature Communications (Dec 2024)

Monitoring long-term cardiac activity with contactless radio frequency signals

  • Bin-Bin Zhang,
  • Dongheng Zhang,
  • Yadong Li,
  • Zhi Lu,
  • Jinbo Chen,
  • Haoyu Wang,
  • Fang Zhou,
  • Yu Pu,
  • Yang Hu,
  • Li-Kun Ma,
  • Qibin Sun,
  • Yan Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55061-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Cardiovascular diseases claim over 10 million lives annually, highlighting the critical need for long-term monitoring and early detection of cardiac abnormalities. Existing techniques like electrocardiograms (ECG) and Holter are accurate but suffer from discomfort caused by body-attached electrodes. While wearable devices using photoplethysmography offer more convenience, they sacrifice accuracy and are susceptible to environmental interference. Here we present a radio frequency (RF)-based (60 to 64 GHz) sensing system that monitors long-term heart rate variability (HRV) with clinical-grade accuracy. Our system successfully overcomes the orders-larger interference from respiration motion in far-field conditions without any model training. By identifying previously undiscovered frequency ranges (beyond 10-order heartbeat harmonics) where heartbeat information predominates over other motions, we generate prominent heartbeat patterns with harmonics typically considered detrimental. Extensive evaluations, including a large-scale outpatient setting involving 6,222 eligible participants and a long-term daily life scenario, where sleep data was collected over 5 separate random nights over two months and a continuous 21-night period, demonstrate that our system can monitor HRV and identify abnormalities with comparable performance to clinical-grade ECG-based systems. This RF-based HRV sensing system has the potential to support active self-assessment and revolutionize medical prevention with long-term and precise health monitoring.