Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin Duo Develop App To Detect Sleep Apnoea At Home

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Apr, 2015 10:46 AM
    A team of Indian-American researchers from the University of Washington (UW) has developed an app that uses a smartphone to wirelessly test for obstructive sleep apnoea in a person's bedroom.
     
    Unlike other home sleep aponea tests in use, "ApneaApp" uses inaudible sound waves emanating from the phone's speakers to track breathing patterns without the need of special equipment or sensors attached to the body.
     
    "ApneaApp" turns a smartphone into an active sonar system that can detect sleep apnoea events.
     
    "It is similar to the way bats navigate. They send out sound signals that hit a target and when those signals bounce back, they know something is there," explained Rajalakshmi Nandakumar, lead author in the UW's department of computer science and engineering.
     
    Tests in a home bedroom setting showed "ApneaApp" works efficiently at distances of up to three feet, in any sleeping position and even when the person is under a blanket.
     
    The clinical study tested the app, that could be available to consumers in the next year or two, on 37 patients.
     
    Researchers put a Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone on a corner of the bed during the overnight sleep study.
     
    During nearly 300 hours of testing, the app tracked various respiratory events including central apnoea, obstructive apnoea and hypopnea with between 95 and 99 percent accuracy, compared to intensive polysomnography.
     
    "ApneaApp" correctly classified 32 out of 37 patients in the clinical study.
     
    To determine, if a person is experiencing sleep apnoea events, "ApneaApp" transforms an Android smartphone phone into an active sonar system that tracks tiny changes in a person's breathing movements.
     
    The phone's speaker sends out inaudible sound waves, which bounce off a sleeping person's body and are picked back up by the phone's microphone.
     
    Because the sound waves are at a frequency adults cannot hear, the app easily screens out audible background noise from people talking, cars honking or a bedroom fan.
     
    Right now phones have sensing capabilities that people do not fully appreciate.
     
    "If you can recalibrate the sensors that most phones already have, you can use them to achieve really amazing things," added co-author Shyam Gollakota, assistant professor of computer science and engineering.
     
    The initial results are impressive and suggest that 'ApneaApp' has the potential to be a simple, noninvasive way for the average person to identify sleep apnea events at home and hopefully seek treatment, the authors noted.
     
    The app is much simpler to use than other home sleep apnoea tests.
     
    "Using ApneaApp at home over the course of several nights or weeks could produce a more complete picture of real-life sleeping patterns," the authors concluded.
     
    The researchers are now exploring the process of getting the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval.
     
    The clinical study will be presented at the "MobiSys 2015" conference in Florence, Italy, in May this year.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    175 Indians Evacuated From Yemen To Reach Kochi

    175 Indians Evacuated From Yemen To Reach Kochi
    The first batch of 175 Indians -- 135 from Kerala and 40 from Tamil Nadu -- evacuated from strife-torn Yemen and taken to Djibouti will land at the Kochi airport after midnight, the external affairs ministry and a Kerala minister overseeing the arrival said on Wednesday.

    175 Indians Evacuated From Yemen To Reach Kochi

    Missing Indian-Origin Boy With Rare Medical Condition Found In Southern England

    Missing Indian-Origin Boy With Rare Medical Condition Found In Southern England
    A major search was launched on Tuesday morning after Malakhi Chijiutomi-Ghosh, who suffers from adrenal hyperplasia and requires medication three times a day, disappeared, Mirror online reported.

    Missing Indian-Origin Boy With Rare Medical Condition Found In Southern England

    Female Foeticide: Indian American Woman, Purvi Patel, Jailed For 20 Years

    Female Foeticide: Indian American Woman, Purvi Patel, Jailed For 20 Years
    Purvi Patel, 33, comes from a family of Indian immigrants who settled in Granger, Indiana, a suburb of South Bend. 

    Female Foeticide: Indian American Woman, Purvi Patel, Jailed For 20 Years

    In Social Experiment, Malaysia's Ethnic Indian Men Say Won't Marry Rape Victims

    In Social Experiment, Malaysia's Ethnic Indian Men Say Won't Marry Rape Victims
    A video survey conducted by a television channel has shown Malaysia’s ethnic Indian men saying that they will not marry rape victims.

    In Social Experiment, Malaysia's Ethnic Indian Men Say Won't Marry Rape Victims

    Florida Stripper Charged In Hit & Run That Left Canadian Man Alexander Sanghwan Critical In Hospital

    Florida Stripper Charged In Hit & Run That Left Canadian Man Alexander Sanghwan Critical In Hospital
    According to an affidavit released Monday night, 26-year-old Olivia Bennett is charged with hitting Alexander Sanghwannear Diamonds strip club.

    Florida Stripper Charged In Hit & Run That Left Canadian Man Alexander Sanghwan Critical In Hospital

    Blogger Hacked To Death In Bangladesh

    Blogger Hacked To Death In Bangladesh
    Three people attacked Oyasiqur Rahman Babu using sharp weapons around 9.45 a.m. in Tejgaon industrial area soon after the online activist stepped out of his house, bdnews24.com quoted Tejgaon zone's Deputy Police Commissioner Biplob Kumar Sarkar as saying.

    Blogger Hacked To Death In Bangladesh