Air Force Lab wants wearables to monitor warfighter health

troops in Afghan mountains (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Todd A. Christopherson)

Connected Warrior

Air Force Lab wants wearables to monitor warfighter health

Wearable sensors hold the promise of protecting warfighters, allowing medical personnel to continuously monitor troops for low oxygen and glucose levels or elevated temperatures that signal a potential casualty.

Already, easy-to-use sensors are widely available. From fabrics that can detect chemical or infectious agents to skin patches and injectable sensors, the market for military wearable sensors market in North America is expected to grow 20% between 2018 to 2023, according to a recent market research study

Monitoring and recording physiological data on warfighters in the field can provide an added degree of safety and help commanders define mission parameters.  Such monitoring devices, however, must be lightweight, compact, unobtrusive and user friendly. 

The military has been experimenting with non-invasive sensors for several years, but researchers understood that implanted sensors could deliver more accurate data. Unfortunately, when a foreign object like a sensor is placed under the skin, the human body protects itself by trying to expel or wall off the implant, limiting the usefulness of invasive  sensors.

But now, the Air Force Research Lab is working with Profusa, a biosensor startup, whose two-part monitoring system gets around the body's response to foreign objects and offers a path to continuous biomonitoring.

To track changes in tissue oxygen and glucose levels, Profusa has developed tiny flexible hydrogel sensors that have the consistency of a soft contact lens and are the size of a grain of rice. Unlike many injected electronics that cause the body to build up scar tissue around a foreign object and interfere with data collection, the biosensor's composition allows it to integrate into the surrounding tissue. It is built on a porous framework that encourages capillary and cellular growth from surrounding tissue.

The hydrogel uses light-emitting fluorescent molecules to continuously signal the presence and concentration of particular body chemicals, such as oxygen or glucose. A lightweight optical reader worn on the skin reads the fluorescent signals from the embedded sensors, resulting in data that can be sent to a smartphone or other collection device, lab officials said.

The Profusa biosensor is "engineered with specific molecules that respond to specific wavelengths of light," AFRL Scientist and Program Manager Jeremy Ward said. "Depending on the composition of those molecules, their optical response changes based on the local concentration of oxygen, glucose, or other analytes in the body.”

To mature the technology for military applications, AFRL and Profusa worked with NetFlex, a consortium of government, industry and universities working to advance manufacturing of flexible hybrid electronics. The partners reduced the size and improved the flexibility of the sensor patch worn on the skin so that it could undergo testing for military applications.

Research and testing of biosensors is being conducted across the military. Last summer, the Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine strapped wearable sensors on 2,000 soldiers in Ranger training at Fort Benning, Ga., to learn more about heat-related casualties, which have been climbing over the past few years. Sensors in the chest harness soldiers wear monitor their core and skin temperatures and heart rates as they train in the heat and humidity. Researchers hope the data from the sensors will help them  learn why some soldiers are more susceptible to heat injury than others, identify those individuals earlier and mitigate casualties.

About the Author

Susan Miller is executive editor at GCN.

Over a career spent in tech media, Miller has worked in editorial, print production and online, starting on the copy desk at IDG’s ComputerWorld, moving to print production for Federal Computer Week and later helping launch websites and email newsletter delivery for FCW. After a turn at Virginia’s Center for Innovative Technology, where she worked to promote technology-based economic development, she rejoined what was to become 1105 Media in 2004, eventually managing content and production for all the company's government-focused websites. Miller shifted back to editorial in 2012, when she began working with GCN.

Miller has a BA and MA from West Chester University and did Ph.D. work in English at the University of Delaware.

Connect with Susan at smiller@gcn.com or @sjaymiller.

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1 comment:

  1. The Military Wearable Sensors market report provides a detailed analysis of global market size, regional and country-level market size, segmentation market growth, market share, competitive Landscape, sales analysis, impact of domestic and global market players, value chain optimization, trade regulations, recent developments, opportunities analysis, strategic market growth analysis, product launches, area marketplace expanding, and technological innovations.

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