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Wearable ultrasound sensors for continuous blood pressure monitoring: Breaking through the limitations of traditional methods

Zhenghao Xu1, §, Yuhan Zhao2, § and He Tian2,

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 Corresponding author: He Tian, tianhe88@tsinghua.edu.cn

DOI: 10.1088/1674-4926/26020064CSTR: 32376.14.1674-4926.26020064

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[1]
Sai Z, Geonho P, Katherine L, et al. Clinical validation of a wearable ultrasound sensor of blood pressure. Nature Biomedical Engineering, 2024: 1
[2]
Bernd V S, Azriel P, Ulrich J P. Clinical review: complications and risk factors of peripheral arterial catheters used for haemodynamic monitoring in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine. Critical care, 6(3), 2002: 199
[3]
Pickering T G. What will replace the mercury sphygmomanometer? Blood Press Monit, 2003, 8(1): 23
[4]
Lin M Y, Hu H J, Zhou S, et al. Soft wearable devices for deep-tissue sensing. Nat Rev Mater, 2022, 7(11): 850 doi: 10.1038/s41578-022-00427-y
[5]
Boubouchairopoulou N, Kollias A, Chiu B, et al. A novel cuffless device for self-measurement of blood pressure: Concept, performance and clinical validation. J Hum Hypertens, 2017, 31(7): 479
[6]
Wang C H, Li X S, Hu H J, et al. Monitoring of the central blood pressure waveform via a conformal ultrasonic device. Nat Biomed Eng, 2018, 2(9): 687
[7]
IEEE standard for wearable, cuffless blood pressure measuring devices - amendment 1. IEEE Std 1708a2019 (Amendment to IEEE Std 1708-2014), 2019, 1
[8]
International organization for standardization. Non-invasive sphygmomanometers–part 2: Clinical investigation of intermittent automated measurement type, November 2018
[9]
Marketing clearance of diagnostic ultrasound systems and transducers: Guidance for industry and food and drug administration staff. Technical Report FDA-2017-D-5372, Food and Drug Administration, 2023
[10]
American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine. Recommended maximum scanning times for displayed thermal index (TI) values. Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, 2023, 42(1): E15
[11]
Thomas S J, Booth J N III, Jaeger B C, et al. Association of sleep characteristics with nocturnal hypertension and nondipping blood pressure in the CARDIA study. J Am Heart Assoc, 2020, 9(7): e015062
[12]
El-Hajj C, Kyriacou P A. A review of machine learning techniques in photoplethysmography for the non-invasive cuff-less measurement of blood pressure. Biomed Signal Process Control, 2020, 58: 101870 doi: 10.1016/j.bspc.2020.101870
[13]
Koo T K, Li M Y. A guideline of selecting and reporting intraclass correlation coefficients for reliability research. J Chiropr Med, 2016, 15(2): 155
Fig. 1.  (Color online) (a) Previous state-of-the-art design with isolated acoustic windows[1]. (b) Redesigned sensor architecture. The 20-element linear array (0.5-mm pitch) forms a 10-mm continuous acoustic window with a silver epoxy backing layer to dampen transducer ringing[1]. (c) The ultrasound sensor being applied onto curvilinear skin surfaces, showing excellent mechanical robustness[1]. Adapted from Zhou, S., Park, G., Longardner, K. et al. Clinical validation of a wearable ultrasound sensor of blood pressure. Nat. Biomed. Eng. (2024). With permission from Springer Nature (License No. 6213330173849).

Fig. 2.  (Color online) ICU validation (n = 4). Top: ultrasound SBP/MAP/DBP (red/green/blue) overlaid with the arterial line (black) during 10–12 h of monitoring. Bottom: wavelet coherence between MAP traces shows sustained, in-phase coupling at long periods (warm colors) within the reliable region bounded by the white dashed cone. (a–d) corresponds to patients 1–4[1]. Adapted from Zhou, S., Park, G., Longardner, K. et al. Clinical validation of a wearable ultrasound sensor of blood pressure. Nat. Biomed. Eng. (2024). With permission from Springer Nature (License No. 6213330173849).

[1]
Sai Z, Geonho P, Katherine L, et al. Clinical validation of a wearable ultrasound sensor of blood pressure. Nature Biomedical Engineering, 2024: 1
[2]
Bernd V S, Azriel P, Ulrich J P. Clinical review: complications and risk factors of peripheral arterial catheters used for haemodynamic monitoring in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine. Critical care, 6(3), 2002: 199
[3]
Pickering T G. What will replace the mercury sphygmomanometer? Blood Press Monit, 2003, 8(1): 23
[4]
Lin M Y, Hu H J, Zhou S, et al. Soft wearable devices for deep-tissue sensing. Nat Rev Mater, 2022, 7(11): 850 doi: 10.1038/s41578-022-00427-y
[5]
Boubouchairopoulou N, Kollias A, Chiu B, et al. A novel cuffless device for self-measurement of blood pressure: Concept, performance and clinical validation. J Hum Hypertens, 2017, 31(7): 479
[6]
Wang C H, Li X S, Hu H J, et al. Monitoring of the central blood pressure waveform via a conformal ultrasonic device. Nat Biomed Eng, 2018, 2(9): 687
[7]
IEEE standard for wearable, cuffless blood pressure measuring devices - amendment 1. IEEE Std 1708a2019 (Amendment to IEEE Std 1708-2014), 2019, 1
[8]
International organization for standardization. Non-invasive sphygmomanometers–part 2: Clinical investigation of intermittent automated measurement type, November 2018
[9]
Marketing clearance of diagnostic ultrasound systems and transducers: Guidance for industry and food and drug administration staff. Technical Report FDA-2017-D-5372, Food and Drug Administration, 2023
[10]
American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine. Recommended maximum scanning times for displayed thermal index (TI) values. Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, 2023, 42(1): E15
[11]
Thomas S J, Booth J N III, Jaeger B C, et al. Association of sleep characteristics with nocturnal hypertension and nondipping blood pressure in the CARDIA study. J Am Heart Assoc, 2020, 9(7): e015062
[12]
El-Hajj C, Kyriacou P A. A review of machine learning techniques in photoplethysmography for the non-invasive cuff-less measurement of blood pressure. Biomed Signal Process Control, 2020, 58: 101870 doi: 10.1016/j.bspc.2020.101870
[13]
Koo T K, Li M Y. A guideline of selecting and reporting intraclass correlation coefficients for reliability research. J Chiropr Med, 2016, 15(2): 155
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    Received: 21 February 2026 Revised: 20 March 2026 Online: Accepted Manuscript: 21 April 2026

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      Zhenghao Xu, Yuhan Zhao, He Tian. Wearable ultrasound sensors for continuous blood pressure monitoring: Breaking through the limitations of traditional methods[J]. Journal of Semiconductors, 2026, In Press. doi: 10.1088/1674-4926/26020064 ****Z H Xu, Y H Zhao, and H Tian, Wearable ultrasound sensors for continuous blood pressure monitoring: Breaking through the limitations of traditional methods[J]. J. Semicond., 2026, accepted doi: 10.1088/1674-4926/26020064
      Citation:
      Zhenghao Xu, Yuhan Zhao, He Tian. Wearable ultrasound sensors for continuous blood pressure monitoring: Breaking through the limitations of traditional methods[J]. Journal of Semiconductors, 2026, In Press. doi: 10.1088/1674-4926/26020064 ****
      Z H Xu, Y H Zhao, and H Tian, Wearable ultrasound sensors for continuous blood pressure monitoring: Breaking through the limitations of traditional methods[J]. J. Semicond., 2026, accepted doi: 10.1088/1674-4926/26020064

      Wearable ultrasound sensors for continuous blood pressure monitoring: Breaking through the limitations of traditional methods

      DOI: 10.1088/1674-4926/26020064
      CSTR: 32376.14.1674-4926.26020064
      More Information
      • Zhenghao Xu is an undergraduate student pursuing a B.S. in Computer Engineering at the Elmore Family School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University. He is a research assistant in Professor He Tian’s group at Tsinghua University. His academic and research interests include wearable health monitoring, and embedded AI
      • Yuhan Zhao obtained his B.E. degree in Electronic and Information Engineering from Hunan University. Subsequently, he joined Professor He Tian’s group at Tsinghua University and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Integrated Circuit Science and Engineering. His research mainly focuses on flexible sensing and neuromorphic perception and computing
      • He Tian received his Ph.D. degree from the Institute of Microelectronics, Tsinghua University in 2015. He is currently a Tenured Associate Professor and Deputy Director at Institute of Integrated Electronics, School of Integrated Circuits, Tsinghua University. He is the recipient of the National High-level Leading Talents, National Outstanding Youth Foundation and Highly Cited Scholar in Web of Science 2024. His current research interest includes various 2D material-based devices with more than 250 publications and more than 10000 times citations
      • Corresponding author: tianhe88@tsinghua.edu.cn
      • Received Date: 2026-02-21
      • Revised Date: 2026-03-20
      • Available Online: 2026-04-21

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