Smartphone Measures Hemoglobin Levels in Photos of Eyelids
Anemia is properly diagnosed using a blood test that measures hemoglobin, but simply looking behind […]
The new technique relies on super-resolution spectroscopy to convert smartphone photos into high-resolution spectral maps. An additional algorithm then reads these spectral signals and turns them into hemoglobin counts. This algorithm was created by training it using eyelid photos and hemoglobin counts of dozens of individual patients presenting at a hospital in Kenya.
“The idea is to get a spectrum of colors using a simple photo. Even if we had several photos with very similar redness, we can’t clearly see the difference. A spectrum gives us multiple data points, which increases chances of finding meaningful information highly correlated to blood hemoglobin level,” said Sang Mok Park, a Purdue Ph.D. candidate in biomedical engineering, and another researcher involved in the study.
Study in journal Optica: mHealth spectroscopy of blood hemoglobin with spectral super-resolution
Via: Purdue
Original Article: (https://www.medgadget.com/2020/05/smartphone-measures-hemoglobin-levels-in-photos-of-eyelids.html)