Non-invasive estimation of random blood glucose from smartphone-based PPG
by Uttam K. Roy; Shivashis Ganguly; Arijit Ukil
International Journal of Biomedical Engineering and Technology (IJBET), Vol. 39, No. 3, 2022

Abstract: Traditional blood glucose metres are invasive in nature, i.e., blood is collected by needle pricking, which is painful and damages tissues over repetition resulting high risk of infections. Although, a few non-invasive methods have been proposed, they require high-end, costly, non-portable and custom devices. This paper proposes a non-invasive method to estimate average blood glucose using only smartphone that enables 24 × 7 monitoring without any extra hardware. The estimation is based on reflectance mode photoplethysmogram (PPG) that records the relative change in light absorbance of glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) due to change in absorption coefficient and path length. Smartphone-based PPG gets often corrupted due to ambient noise, motion artefacts, etc. We rigorously cleaned the noisy PPG signal and measured reflected intensity from PPG of 25 patients, applied nonlinear regression to estimate glucose and cross-validated against a laboratory invasive method. The RMS error comes out to be 2.1525 mg/dL which is superior to existing non-invasive techniques. To prove the correctness, three standard techniques viz. geometric regression, Bland-Altman analyses and surveillance error grid are used.

Online publication date: Mon, 18-Jul-2022

The full text of this article is only available to individual subscribers or to users at subscribing institutions.

 
Existing subscribers:
Go to Inderscience Online Journals to access the Full Text of this article.

Pay per view:
If you are not a subscriber and you just want to read the full contents of this article, buy online access here.

Complimentary Subscribers, Editors or Members of the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Biomedical Engineering and Technology (IJBET):
Login with your Inderscience username and password:

    Username:        Password:         

Forgotten your password?


Want to subscribe?
A subscription gives you complete access to all articles in the current issue, as well as to all articles in the previous three years (where applicable). See our Orders page to subscribe.

If you still need assistance, please email subs@inderscience.com