A sensor-packed CPR assistant delivers effective resuscitation every time

by John B. Carnett A HELPING HAND Nilesh Patel isn´t really in trouble, but if he was, the CPR glove he and classmate Corey Centen built would give him as much as a 50 percent better chance of living by making sure Centen performed the CPR right. John B. Carnett

Name: CPR Glove

Inventors: Corey Centen, Nilesh Patel

Cost to Develop:
$2,500

Time: 6 months

Prototype | | | | | Product


Of the 300,000 people in the U.S. who suffer cardiac arrest every year, only 5 to 10 percent survive. Researchers think that number could quadruple if CPR was performed more often and correctly. The problem is that the procedure is almost never done right: Nearly 60 percent of the time, compressions don't reach the required 100 per minute. And 37 percent of the time, compressions don't go deep enough into the chest. Corey Centen and Nilesh Patel, classmates at McMaster University in Ontario, stumbled across these statistics while brainstorming an idea for their engineering class's final project.

Realizing how little of their own high-school CPR training had actually stuck, the two came up with a glove that shows people how to correctly perform CPR while they are actually doing it. The glove could solve one of the most challenging problems in cardiac care. "They have a really nifty idea," says Benjamin Abella, associate director of the Center for Resuscitation Science at the University of Pennsylvania. He describes the current state of CPR as "like trying to fly a fighter jet without air-speed monitors."

Although the prototype glove is made of a cheap nylon-spandex composite (sewn by Centen's aunt), it's loaded with circuits and sensors. When it's placed on a person's chest, an electrocardiograph measures heart rate to indicate whether CPR is actually needed. A metronome beeps to signal proper compression timing. Accelerometers and piezoelectric sensors trigger video feedback about whether the compressions are deep enough and cue the rescuer to lean over and blow air into the victim's mouth. The glove hasn't been tested on humans, but the students say that it works on the sophisticated simulator mannequins used in cardiac testing, and it recently won first place in the Ontario Engineering Competition for innovative design.

With their ramen-level budget depleted, Centen and Patel are looking to hook up with a medical-device company that can help them develop the glove further and take it through FDA trials. They estimate that a mass-produced version could be made for as little as $60. The project earned them an A+ from their professor, but good grades aren't the goal anymore. "We want to get this out there as fast as possible-and make it as accessible as possible-to save lives," Centen says. How's that for senioritis?

More Invention Awards:

  • A Levitating Arrow Rest - Makes archers stealthier and more accurate with some well-placed magnets
  • A Shocking New Weapon - A muscle-numbing magic wand protects cops and citizens, Jedi-style
  • A Six Strokes of Genius - An engine that uses steam to squeeze more miles from gas
  • A Chopper Shield - Catches helicopter-bound grenades with a net made of Kevlar and steel
  • A Big Ball of Connectivity - An antenna that blows up like a balloon brings satellite communications anywhere, anytime.
  • The New Velcro - A stronger, better grip without the incessant ripping sound. Has a long-standing dream finally been realized?
  • A New Breed of Mouse - Give your mouse the finger to control your computer in three dimensions
  • The Flying Belt - Rappel up a wall at an astonishing 10 feet per second with the Atlas Powered Rope Ascender
Want to learn more about breakthroughs in electronics, medicine, nanotech, and more?
Subscribe to Popular Science and enter to win $5,000!

2 Comments

alperkemal

from mudanya, bursa

SUPEERRRR....HOW MUCH İS İT??? SEND ME PLEASE....I WILL TRY FOR MYSELF...COS'MY HEART BEAT BEİNG SO MUCH WHEN I SAW MY GIRLFRİEND...I MUST CARRY İT IN MY POCKET EVERYTİME....THANKS BOYS.....YOU ARE GREAT!!!!

How could you please send it to me?

www.emailextractor14.com
www.pokerbot-smart.com



Download Our iPhone App

Stay up to date on the latest news of the future of science and technology from your iPhone with full articles, images and offline viewing



Follow Us On Twitter

Featuring every article from the magazine and website, plus links from around the Web. Also see our PopSci DIY feed



Become a Fan On Facebook

Share links with friends, comment on stories and more


December 2009: Best of What's New

In our December issue, Popular Science names the 100 best innovations of the year: bombproof wallpaper, self-parking cars, the fastest helicopter, and 97 more. Plus inventor profiles and videos.

Check out the best of what's new here.

Popular Science Photo Pool


Share your photos in the Pop Sci pool at www.flickr.com!
tags_sprite.png
POP_embeddedForm_cover_May09.jpg