A Bioinspired Active Robotic Simulator of the Human Respiratory System

Elena Giannaccini* (Corresponding Author), Andrew Hinitt, Andrew Stinchcombe, Keren Yue, Martin Birchall, Andrew Conn, Jonathan Rossiter

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Pathologies affecting the respiratory system can lead to a debilitating decrease in quality of life and can be fatal. To test medical devices and implants for the human respiratory system, a simulation system that can reproduce multiple respiratory features is necessary. Currently available respiratory simulators
only focus on reproducing flow rate profiles of breathing while coughing simulators focus on aerosol analysis. In this paper we propose a novel, bioinspired robotic simulator that can physically replicate both breathing and coughing flow rate characteristics of healthy adults. We conducted a study on 31 healthy adult participants to gather the flow rate measurement of normal breathing, deep breathing, breathing while running and coughing. Coughing flow rate profiles vary considerably between participants, making an accurate simulation of coughs a challenge. To enable cough flow rate simulation, a new methodology based on the identification of four cough phases, Attack, Decay, Sustain and Release (ADSR) and their parametrization was devised. This methodology leads to the unprecedented ability to reproduce diverse and complex coughing flow rate profiles. Our simulator is able to reproduce respiratory flows with a root mean square error (RMSE) of 1.8 L/min between normal participant breathing and its simulation, 5% of the maximum flow rate simulated for that participant (pMFR), an RMSE of 10.08 L/min for deep breathing, 18% of the pMFR and an RMSE of 13.29 L/min for exertion breathing, 17% of pMFR. For the simulation of an average cough we recorded an RMSE of 51.43 L/min, 13% of the pMFR and for a low flow rate cough an RMSE of 12.38
L/min, 9.5% of the pMFR. The presented simulator matches the fundamentals of human breathing and coughing, advancing the current capability of respiratory system simulators.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)442-454
Number of pages13
JournalIEEE Transactions on Medical Robotics and Bionics
Volume5
Issue number2
Early online date10 Apr 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 May 2023

Bibliographical note

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by funding from Wellcome Trust. JR is funded by the EPSRC through grants EP/V062158/1, EP/T020792/1, EP/V026518/1, EP/S026096/1 and EP/R02961X/1 and the Royal Academy of Engineering as Chair of Emerging Technologies. AC is funded by the EPSRC through grants P/T020792/1 and EP/R02961X/1. In addition we would like to thank Gravestone J. for his insights, Bennett G. for his vital help with graphics, Cadegiani A. for her longstanding help with mathematics, Prof. P. Back for his help with statistics and Paulraj R. from UCLB.

Data Availability Statement

Data Access Statement: The datasets have been deposited in the University of Bristol repository

Keywords

  • Human respiratory system
  • Bioinspired robotics
  • Breathing and Coughing Simulator
  • Medical devices testing

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