The Niagara Falls Review

A selfie may reveal your blood pressure

Toronto prof develops app that can track facial blood flow

- ADINA BRESGE

TORONTO — You can learn a lot about someone from the videos they take of themselves. One day, these recordings may even be able to reveal your blood pressure, says a Toronto researcher.

Kang Lee, a professor and research chair in developmen­tal neuroscien­ce at University of Toronto, is developing a smartphone app that he says can monitor blood pressure by analyzing a short selfie video.

The technology, called “transderma­l optical imaging,” takes readings by tracking blood flow patterns in the face.

Digital sensors on a smartphone can detect the red light that’s reflected by hemoglobin, a blood cell protein, under the skin. This allows the camera to capture minuscule changes in circulatio­n that can be used to predict blood pressure through machine-learning algorithms, Lee explains.

Lee and his University of Toronto colleagues teamed up with Chinese researcher­s at Hangzhou Normal University and Zhejiang Normal University to study the software.

Their findings were published Tuesday in the American Heart Associatio­n journal Circulatio­n: Cardiovasc­ular Imaging.

Researcher­s asked 1,328 participan­ts in Canada and China to take two-minute videos of their faces on an iPhone using the app. These results were compared to readings on a traditiona­l cuffbased blood pressure monitor.

The study suggests these smartphone-captured blood pressure measuremen­ts were approximat­ely 95 per cent accurate.

While the proof of concept looks promising, Lee noted there are a few important caveats to the findings.

He said researcher­s only collected data on adults whose blood pressure was within the range of normal, and further research is needed to see if the app works for people with hypertensi­on, or high blood pressure.

Another limitation was that more than 90 per cent of participan­ts were of East Asian descent, and Lee said the software’s prediction model may not reflect variations in cardiovasc­ular activity across ethnicitie­s.

Lee said his team is looking for potential collaborat­ors around the world in order to recruit a more diverse group of participan­ts for future studies.

“We need to expand our sample so we don’t have a racist app that only can measure certain groups of people’s blood pressure,” Lee said.

However, Lee noted the model aims to account for racial difference­s by not including measuremen­ts of the pigment melanin, which determines skin tone.

While it may be a while before the technology reaches consumers, Lee said it could have widespread health benefits.

Nearly one-quarter of Canadians have hypertensi­on, and 15 per cent of them are unaware of their condition, according to Statistics Canada.

 ?? ANURA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? This is what a smartphone app that can monitor blood pressure by analyzing a short selfie video may look like.
ANURA THE CANADIAN PRESS This is what a smartphone app that can monitor blood pressure by analyzing a short selfie video may look like.

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