Vitalview: Wireless Vital Display using Smart Glass AR Technology

Vijayakumar S.*, Janaki R. **, Kaviranjani A.***, Kiruthiga S.****, Kaviya P.*****
*-***** Department of Biomedical Engineering, Gnanamani College of Technology, Namakkal, Tamil Nadu, India.
Periodicity:January - June'2025

Abstract

Doctors are enthusiastic about adopting to new technologies to enhance patient care, with augmented reality (AR) emerging as a significant innovation. AR improves the use of medical data by overlaying artificial information onto the senses. Traditionally, patient details such as vital signs are manually recorded near beds in hospitals. The proposed solution equips doctors with AR goggles for instant access to patient data without relying on manual notes. Surgeons actively pursue technologies to enhance their operating environments, frequently leading the way in adopting innovations for better surgical outcomes. In today's digital age, disruptive technologies like AR are increasingly accessible and affordable, making their integration into healthcare inevitable and promising enhanced utilization of medical data. AR is being explored across various applications in surgery, including anatomical visualization, intraoperative procedures and post-operative rehabilitation. By integrating artificial information into the user's senses, AR boosts task efficiency. The proposed system utilizes semi-transparent glasses to display crucial information for doctors, seamlessly integrating it with the real-world view/ real-time patient data collected by sensors in hospitals is wirelessly transmitted to the AR glasses, alerting doctors to abnormal conditions and enabling prompt intervention based on the patient's current health status.

Keywords

Augmented Reality (AR), Smart Glasses, Vital Signs, Wearable Technology, Real Time.

How to Cite this Article?

Vijayakuma, S., Janaki, R., Kaviranjani, A., Kiruthiga, S., and Kaviya P. (2025). Vitalview: Wireless Vital Display using Smart Glass AR Technology. i-manager’s Journal on Augmented & Virtual Reality, 3(1), 27-32.

References

[6]. Yan, Q., Han, J., Li, Y., & DENG, H. (2012). On limitations of designing usable leakage-resilient password systems: Attacks, principles and usability. In 19th Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS) (pp. 1-17).
If you have access to this article please login to view the article or kindly login to purchase the article

Purchase Instant Access

Single Article

North Americas,UK,
Middle East,Europe
India Rest of world
USD EUR INR USD-ROW
Pdf 40 40 300
Online 15 15 300
Pdf & Online 40 40 300

Options for accessing this content:
  • If you would like institutional access to this content, please recommend the title to your librarian.
    Library Recommendation Form
  • If you already have i-manager's user account: Login above and proceed to purchase the article.
  • New Users: Please register, then proceed to purchase the article.