Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




SPACE MEDICINE
Johns Hopkins undergraduates help design space stethoscope for NASA
by Phil Sneiderman for JHU News
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 27, 2013


Though developed for NASA's use in outer space, this improved stethoscope could also be put to use on Earth in combat situations, where ambient noise is abundant, and in developing countries, where medical care conditions are a bit more primitive.

A team of students at Johns Hopkins University has designed a stethoscope that delivers accurate heart and body sounds to medics who are trying to assess astronauts' health on long missions in noisy spacecraft.

Space is serene, because no air means no sound. But inside the average spacecraft, with its whirring fans, humming computers, and buzzing instruments, the noise level is equivalent to that of a raucous party with dozens of laughing, talking guests.

"Imagine trying to get a clear stethoscope signal in an environment like that, where the ambient noise contaminates the faint heart signal. That is the problem we set out to solve," said Elyse Edwards, a JHU senior who teamed up on the project with fellow seniors Noah Dennis and Shin Shin Cheng.

The students worked under the guidance of James West, a Johns Hopkins research professor in electrical and computer engineering and co-inventor of the electret microphone used in telephones and in almost 90 percent of the more than two billion microphones produced today.

Together, they developed a stethoscope that uses both electronic and mechanical strategies to help the device's internal microphone pick up sounds that are clear and discernible-even in the noisy spacecraft, and even when the device is not placed perfectly correctly on the astronaut's body.

"Considering that during long space missions, there is a pretty good chance an actual doctor won't be on board, we thought it was important that the stethoscope did its job well, even when an amateur was the one using it," Dennis said.

The project was developed during a two-semester mechanical engineering senior design course offered by the university's Whiting School of Engineering. Teams of three or four undergraduates are each given a small budget to design and build a prototype requested by a sponsoring business or organization. This year's results were unveiled recently at the recent Design Day showcase.

Though developed for NASA's use in outer space, this improved stethoscope could also be put to use on Earth in combat situations, where ambient noise is abundant, and in developing countries, where medical care conditions are a bit more primitive.

West also plans to use the device to record infants' heart and lung sounds in developing countries as part of a project that will attempt to develop a stethoscope that knows how to identify the typical wheezing and crackling breath sounds associated with common diseases. This would allow on-site medics to help make preliminary automated diagnoses.

.


Related Links
Johns Hopkins University
Space Medicine Technology and Systems






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SPACE MEDICINE
NASA Prepares For International Space Biology Research Mission
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Apr 30, 2013
NASA and the Russian Institute of Biomedical Problems, Moscow, are collaborating on a space biology mission aboard an unmanned Russian biosatellite to understand better the mechanisms of how life adapts to microgravity and then readapts to gravity on Earth. NASA will participate in the post-flight analysis of rodents flown for 30 days on the biosatellite, Bion-M1, which launched April 19 from Ba ... read more


SPACE MEDICINE
Ecuador's only satellite may have been damaged in space collision

New analysis yields improvements in 3D imaging

Professor who once had to work at Subway makes math breakthrough

Iron-platinum alloys could be new-generation hard drives

SPACE MEDICINE
General Dynamics to Deliver U.S. Army's Newest Tactical Ground Station Intelligence System

Boeing-built WGS-5 Satellite Enhances Tactical Communications for Warfighters

US Navy And Lockheed Martin Deliver Secure Communications Satellite For Mobile Users

Making frequency-hopping radios practical

SPACE MEDICINE
Russian Spacecraft Manufacturer to Make Four Launches in 2014

Electric Propulsion

O3b Networks Launcher and payload integration are underway at Kourou

Arianespace underscores strong partnership with Japan during Tokyo meetings

SPACE MEDICINE
GPS solution provides three-minute tsunami alerts

Northrop Grumman Delivers 8,000th LN-100 Inertial Navigation System

NASA Builds Unusual Testbed for Analyzing X-ray Navigation Technologies

Pakistan adopts Chinese rival GPS satellite system

SPACE MEDICINE
NASA's BARREL Mission Launches 20 Balloons

US F-15 crashes in Japan, pilot ejects safely

Frigid Heat: How Ice can Menace a Hot Engine

Air China says orders 100 Airbus A320 jets worth $8.8 bn

SPACE MEDICINE
New Technique May Open Up an Era of Atomic-scale Semiconductor Devices

Bright Future For Photonic Quantum Computers

New magnetic graphene may revolutionize electronics

Flawed Diamonds Promise Sensory Perfection

SPACE MEDICINE
NASA Ships Sensors for Seafaring Satellite to France

NASA's Landsat Satellite Looks for a Cloud-Free View

Google team captures Galapagos Island beauty for maps

NASA Helps Pinpoint Glaciers' Role in Sea Level Rise

SPACE MEDICINE
Frog once imported for pregnancy testing brought deadly amphibian disease to US

Hong Kong launches plan to tackle waste crisis

Nearly 1,000 protest against China chemical plant

Making gold green: New non-toxic method for mining gold




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement