Skin Patch Monitors Vital Signs

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Getting accurate, timely information on a person's vital signs will soon be as easy as putting on a skin patch that's like a temporary tattoo, according to Medicalnewstoday.com.

The collaboration between a group of University of Illinois scientists and a few Northwestern University engineers has produced a super-thin patch, replete with tiny wireless antennas, light-emitting diodes, solar cells, transistors, and sensors.

According to its creators, the patch has the capability to perform a multitude of functions, including brain-wave and vital-sign monitoring. Thinner than a fingernail and applied to the skin like a temporary tattoo, the patch has been designed to be barely noticeable to the person wearing it. 

The patch could lessen the stress and inconvenience for elderly patients with chronic illnesses who require frequent monitoring. Keeping track of vital signs and other biological functions often requires tangles of wires, conductive gel, and occasionally the insertion of pins into a patient's body.

However, CBS News reports that because the patch is mounted on the skin, which is constantly shedding dead layers, it will likely have to be replaced every few weeks.

 
 

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