A sensor inserted in a tooth
could one day tell doctors when people have defied medical advice to give up
smoking or eat less. Built into a tiny circuit board that fits in a tooth cavity,
the sensor includes an accelerometer that sends data on mouth motion to a
smartphone.
Machine learning software
contained in the sensor is taught to recognise each jaw motion pattern, then
works out how much of the time the patient is chewing, drinking, speaking,
coughing or smoking.
The inventors – Hao-hua Chu and
colleagues at National Taiwan University in Taipei want to use the mouth as a
window on a variety of health issues. The device can be fitted into dentures or
a dental brace, and the team plan to miniaturise the device to fit in a cavity
or crown.
The researchers say the sensor shows great promise: in tests on
eight people with a prototype implant installed in their dentures, the system
recognised oral activities correctly 94 per cent of the time.
The prototype was attached to a power source by an external wire, so the team still needs a way to include a micro-battery
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