Digital Stethoscope
The general purpose of digital stethoscope whether acoustic or digital, is used mainly to listen to heart and lung sounds in the body as an aid to diagnosis. Listening, or auscultation, has been done with acoustic stethoscopes for almost two hundred years; recently, electronic digital stethoscope...
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2012
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Online Access: | http://ir.unikl.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/1050 |
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Summary: | The general purpose of digital stethoscope whether acoustic or digital, is used
mainly to listen to heart and lung sounds in the body as an aid to diagnosis. Listening, or
auscultation, has been done with acoustic stethoscopes for almost two hundred years;
recently, electronic digital stethoscopes have been developed. The goal of a basic digital
stethoscope is to have it retain the look and feel of an acoustic stethoscope but to
improve listening performance. So for this project is more focus playback and save the
result. It will become successful when the system can provide data to visually chart
results by connecting to an off-instrument display such as a computer monitor. This
advanced functionality increases the physician's diagnostic capability. Maintaining the
existing acoustic stethoscope form (i.e., that "look and feel") while improving the
performance digitally requires the use of small, low-power solutions. The essential
elements of a digital stethoscope are the sound transducer, the audio codec electronics,
and the speakers. The sound transducer, which converts sound into an analog voltage, is
the most critical piece in the chain. It determines the diagnostic quality of the digital
stethoscope and ensures a familiar user experience to those accustomed to acoustic
stethoscopes.
The analog voltage needs to be conditioned and then converted into a digital
signal using an audio analog-to-digital converter (ADC) or audio codec. Some digital
stethoscopes have noise cancellation that requires a secondary sound transducer or
microphone to record the ambient noise so that it can be removed digitally. In this
approach, two audio ADCs are required. Once in the digital domain, a microcontroller
unit (MCU) or digital signal processor (DSP) performs signal processing, including
ambient noise reduction and filtering, to limit the bandwidth to the range for cardiac or
pulmonary listening. The processed digital signal is then converted back to analog by an
audio digital-to-analog converter (DAC) or audio codec. Once the captured sound is
converted to an analog voltage, it can be sent out through an audio jack and played back
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on either a computer or through the digital stethoscope. The captured sound can also be
manipulated digitally. The sound is commonly transferred with a wired interface, such
as USB, or with a wireless interface like Bluetooth or another proprietary wireless
interface. |
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