Creator Phil Terrill with PhD supervisors Dr Gus Cooper
(left), and Associate Professor Stephen Wilson (right).
A UQ researcher has created a new way to measure breathing patterns in sleeping infants which may also work for adults.
The researcher, PhD student Philip Terrill, has created a
mathematical formula that measures varying breathing patterns which
indicate different sleep states such as active or quiet sleep.
Mr Terrill said a band, placed around the child's chest, recorded
breathing rates which were then analysed using the new formula based on
the maths of chaos theory.
It has been successfully tested on 30 children so far.
Current sleep monitoring involves an overnight stay in a hospital
sleep lab with specialised equipment needing regular attention of a
nurse, doctor or sleep technician.
Mr Terrill said he hoped his formula would form the basis of an
automated sleep monitoring system that was cheaper and easier to use
than current methods.
“In the future, diagnosing a sleep problem may be as simple as
putting on a breathing monitor during a night's sleep at home, in your
own bed,” Mr Terrill said.
“This would mean that those children with sleep problems could be quickly diagnosed and treated appropriately.”
Minor infant sleeping problems can result in daytime sleepiness and
inattention with prolonged problems causing behavioural and learning
difficulties.
Mr Terrill said clinical research showed that up to 20 per cent of
Australian children have symptoms of sleep problems and there were very
few facilities available to investigate sleep problems in Queensland
children.
He said previous work analysed sleep breathing patterns using
conventional statistical methods but his work used techniques from a
branch of mathematics called chaos theory.
The next step is to test his formula on teenagers and adults.
The 25-year-old from St Lucia has been working with respiratory and sleep medicine experts at the Mater Children's Hospital.
His work is also part of MedTeQ, a centre within UQ's School of
Information Technology and Electrical Engineering, which links
biomedical engineering expertise from UQ and Brisbane's major
hospitals.
Mr Terrill is a National Health and Medical Research Council
scholarship winner and is supervised by UQ's Associate Professors
Stephen Wilson and Gus Cooper who is Director of Respiratory and Sleep
Medicine at the Mater Children's Hospital.