Camera fusion for real-time temperature monitoring of neonates using deep learning

The continuous monitoring of vital signs is a crucial aspect of medical care in neonatal intensive care units. Since cable-based sensors pose a potential risk for the immature skin of preterm infants, unobtrusive monitoring techniques using camera systems are increasingly investigated. The combinati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical & biological engineering & computing 2022-06, Vol.60 (6), p.1787-1800
Hauptverfasser: Lyra, Simon, Rixen, Jöran, Heimann, Konrad, Karthik, Srinivasa, Joseph, Jayaraj, Jayaraman, Kumutha, Orlikowsky, Thorsten, Sivaprakasam, Mohanasankar, Leonhardt, Steffen, Hoog Antink, Christoph
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The continuous monitoring of vital signs is a crucial aspect of medical care in neonatal intensive care units. Since cable-based sensors pose a potential risk for the immature skin of preterm infants, unobtrusive monitoring techniques using camera systems are increasingly investigated. The combination of deep learning–based algorithms and camera modalities such as RGB and infrared thermography can improve the development of cable-free methods for the extraction of vital parameters. In this study, a real-time approach for local extraction of temperatures on the body surface of neonates using a multi-modal clinical dataset was implemented. Therefore, a trained deep learning–based keypoint detector was used for body landmark prediction in RGB. Image registration was conducted to transfer the RGB points to the corresponding thermographic recordings. These landmarks were used to extract the body surface temperature in various regions to determine the central-peripheral temperature difference. A validation of the keypoint detector showed a mean average precision of 0.82. The registration resulted in mean absolute errors of 16.4 px (8.2 mm) for x and 22.4 px (11.2 mm) for y . The evaluation of the temperature extraction revealed a mean absolute error of 0.55  ∘ C. A final performance of 31 fps was observed on the NVIDIA Jetson Xavier NX module, which proves real-time capability on an embedded GPU system. As a result, the approach can perform real-time temperature extraction on a low-cost GPU module. Graphical abstract
ISSN:0140-0118
1741-0444
DOI:10.1007/s11517-022-02561-9