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Nevada
company, ORNL develop potential lifesaver to
monitor hydration
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Dec. 20, 2007 — A Las
Vegas business and Oak Ridge National
Laboratory are improving the odds for people
medically at risk from dehydration or
congestive heart failure.
The task for ORNL researchers Chuck Britton,
Nance Ericson and Gary Alley was to improve
and miniaturize Noninvasive Medical
Technologies' ZOE, a medical device that
monitors a person's hydration, or level of
fluid.
This is of great importance to members of
the military and to thousands of home health
care patients, athletes, firefighters and
first responders.
"Technologies that allow for better
hydration management will improve
performance, medical triage and treatment of
soldiers and others who are suffering from a
fluid-electrolyte imbalance," said Katy
DeMarr, vice president, government relations
of Noninvasive Medical Technologies.
As basic as it may seem for people to
maintain proper levels of fluid, in practice
it is not so simple as nationwide each year
hundreds of people either die or suffer ill
effects because of dehydration.
"Studies have shown that up to 80 percent of
troops become dehydrated while performing
their duties, and that's a major concern to
the military because the soldiers are not
able to perform at peak levels," DeMarr
said. "Similarly, high school and college
athletes would benefit greatly from knowing
their hydration levels."
While Noninvasive Medical Technologies has a
ZOE on the market, used primarily in home
health care applications, the company's goal
was to improve upon the product by making it
more robust, smaller, less expensive and
able to be monitored remotely.
DeMarr said her company sought out ORNL
because of its expertise and stellar
reputation in the areas of chip design. The
project has progressed rapidly as Britton
and Ericson, members of the lab's
Engineering Science and Technology Division,
began work about a year ago and clinical
trials for the new device were completed
last month.
"Our key contributions were to reduce the
system to an integrated circuit, or chip, to
reduce the amount of power needed to operate
the unit and to lower the cost," Ericson
said.
"Before we could do that, however, as a team
we had to better understand the product as a
circuit that has to operate in a wide range
of temperatures yet maintain a high degree
of accuracy," Britton said.
The ZOE Fluid Status Monitor measures
thoracic base impedance, which is a
measurement of the electric current
traveling from the top to the bottom of the
thorax. This is accomplished by placing one
electrode at the top and another at the
bottom of the breastbone. The less
resistance - measured in ohms - the more
fluid in the chest. The normal range for
people is between 19 ohms and 30 ohms.
Values lower than 19 indicate that a person
may be overhydrated while values exceeding
30 indicate dehydration.
"The measurement is a quick and easy method
to determine whether a person is
experiencing fluid congestion or
dehydration," DeMarr said. "Studies have
shown that Zo, or the base resistance, is an
early predictor of congestion in heart
failure, showing decreases as early as two
weeks prior to weight gain and other
symptoms."
Å wearable wireless version of the ZOE
instrument, ZOEwi, will allow monitoring
during activity and is planned for market
introduction in 2008, according to Jeremy
Copeland, vice president of marketing for
Noninvasive Medical Technologies.
UT-Battelle manages Oak Ridge National
Laboratory for the Department of Energy.
This work was funded by Noninvasive Medical
Technologies (http://nmtinc.org/)
and the Air Force Surgeon General's Office.