JMIR Formative Research (May 2022)

Emergency Telemedicine Mobile Ultrasounds Using a 5G-Enabled Application: Development and Usability Study

  • Maximilian Berlet,
  • Thomas Vogel,
  • Mohamed Gharba,
  • Joseph Eichinger,
  • Egon Schulz,
  • Helmut Friess,
  • Dirk Wilhelm,
  • Daniel Ostler,
  • Michael Kranzfelder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/36824
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 5
p. e36824

Abstract

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BackgroundDigitalization affects almost every aspect of modern daily life, including a growing number of health care services along with telemedicine applications. Fifth-generation (5G) mobile communication technology has the potential to meet the requirements for this digitalized future with high bandwidths (10 GB/s), low latency (<1 ms), and high quality of service, enabling wireless real-time data transmission in telemedical emergency health care applications. ObjectiveThe aim of this study is the development and clinical evaluation of a 5G usability test framework enabling preclinical diagnostics with mobile ultrasound using 5G network technology. MethodsA bidirectional audio-video data transmission between the ambulance car and hospital was established, combining both 5G-radio and -core network parts. Besides technical performance evaluations, a medical assessment of transferred ultrasound image quality and transmission latency was examined. ResultsTelemedical and clinical application properties of the ultrasound probe were rated 1 (very good) to 2 (good; on a 6 -point Likert scale rated by 20 survey participants). The 5G field test revealed an average end-to-end round trip latency of 10 milliseconds. The measured average throughput for the ultrasound image traffic was 4 Mbps and for the video stream 12 Mbps. Traffic saturation revealed a lower video quality and a slower video stream. Without core slicing, the throughput for the video application was reduced to 8 Mbps. The deployment of core network slicing facilitated quality and latency recovery. ConclusionsBidirectional data transmission between ambulance car and remote hospital site was successfully established through the 5G network, facilitating sending/receiving data and measurements from both applications (ultrasound unit and video streaming). Core slicing was implemented for a better user experience. Clinical evaluation of the telemedical transmission and applicability of the ultrasound probe was consistently positive.