Wearable sensor can monitor obstructive sleep apnea treatment response: Study

IANS May 19, 2025 448 views

A groundbreaking wearable sensor is transforming how obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is monitored and treated. The medical-grade device, worn as a ring, offers continuous data collection that provides more comprehensive insights than traditional sleep studies. Unlike consumer wearables, this technology is clinically cleared and allows both patients and healthcare providers to track treatment responses in real-time. By bridging the gap between complex medical testing and accessible monitoring, the device represents a significant advancement in personalized sleep disorder management.

"It may be better to collect one or two channels of data over 25 nights than 25 channels over one night" - Ketan Mehta, Apnimed
Wearable sensor can monitor obstructive sleep apnea treatment response: Study
San Francisco, May 18: A wearable pulse oximeter and connected software platform show promise for monitoring obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and other sleep-related breathing diseases, according to new research released on Sunday.

Key Points

1

Advanced pulse oximeter enables longitudinal sleep apnea monitoring

2

Wearable device provides continuous medical-grade data collection

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Smartphone app facilitates shared decision-making between patients and providers

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Technology potentially expands access to sleep disorder management

The device (pulse oximeter), which is cleared for medical use, was designed for comfort and ease of use; a clinical trial found high rates of utilisation by patients. It could be used to track patient response to OSA treatment over time.

“Investigators in our clinical research trials report how useful longitudinal data are to observe night-to-night variability and the response to treatment of OSA,” said Ketan Mehta, head of product and engineering for Connected Wearables at Apnimed.

“One sleep specialist even reported that it may be better to collect one or two channels of data over 25 nights than 25 channels over one night, which is considered the gold standard with in-lab polysomnography,” Mehta added.

Wearable sensors like the Oura ring and Apple Watch that measure biometrics during sleep are widely used by consumers, but are not cleared for medical use.

At the same time, other medical devices used in sleep studies gather clinically relevant data, but are too cumbersome and costly to use for frequent monitoring.

This tool could potentially expand patient access to care through pulmonologists to manage routine sleep apnea in their patients, instead of having to refer them out to a sleep specialist, he added. The device provides a bridge between these two extremes, he said.

Worn as a ring, the device offers several key differences from other consumer wearables. Notably, it uses transmittance-based photoplethysmography, which has been shown to be more suitable for the proximal phalanx region, provide better signal-to-noise ratio, and is more effective in low perfusion situations.

It also engages in continuous data collection, rather than spot checks, he added.

The device connects to an app that users can access from their smartphone, giving patients access to a subset of the same data as their health care providers.

“These data empower both parties to be informed, and they’re able to have more meaningful conversations. This offers the opportunity for shared decision making between patient and provider using digital medicine,” Mehta said.

—IANS

Reader Comments

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Rahul K.
This is a game-changer for India where sleep apnea is often undiagnosed! Many people snore loudly but never get tested because sleep studies are expensive. If this device becomes affordable, it could help millions. Hope it reaches Indian markets soon. 🙏
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Priya M.
Interesting tech but I wonder about accuracy compared to lab tests. My father did polysomnography at AIIMS last year - will this give same quality data? Also, how will it work in Indian summer heat when fingers swell? Need more local testing before recommending.
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Arjun S.
As someone who's struggled with sleep apnea for years, this gives me hope! Current solutions are either too expensive (CPAP machines) or uncomfortable. A simple ring that monitors while I sleep sounds perfect. Just hope the app has Hindi interface for our parents' generation.
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Neha T.
Good innovation but Indian doctors might be hesitant to trust this over traditional methods. Our healthcare system moves slowly in adopting new tech. Also, data privacy concerns - who can access our sleep patterns? Need strong regulations before mass adoption.
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Vikram J.
Make in India opportunity here! Instead of waiting for imports, our startups should develop similar affordable solutions tailored for Indian conditions. We have the tech talent - just need proper funding and medical partnerships. #DigitalIndia #HealthTech
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Sunita R.
My husband's snoring is legendary in our colony 😅 Jokes aside, sleep disorders are serious health issues. If this device can help diagnose without hospital visits, it would be blessing for middle-class families. Hope the price is reasonable when launched here.

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