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NASA Tech DevelopedxA0for Home Health Monitoring

NASA Tech DevelopedxA0for Home Health Monitoring

  • NASA has developed technology to monitor vital signs at home through a wall-mounted device called Cardi/o Monitor.
  • The device, developed by Advanced TeleSensors Inc. with an exclusive license from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, can detect heart rate and respiration, as well as stress and sleep apnea.
  • The Cardi/o Monitor is small, contactless, and can be mounted on a ceiling or wall, allowing for continuous monitoring of vital signs without disrupting daily activities.
  • The device sends data directly to medical care providers, reducing the need for in-person visits and cutting down on the risk of infectious diseases transmission.
  • The technology has the potential to advance health solutions and is an example of NASA’s spinoff innovations that can benefit society beyond space exploration.

2 min read

Preparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater)

In a clean room, Europa Clipper is examined by engineers, the photo is focusing on a box full of wires toward the top of the spacecraft
NASA uses radio frequency (RF) for a variety of tasks in space, including communications. The Europa Clipper RF panel — the box with the copper wiring near the top — will send data carried by radio waves through the spacecraft between the electronics and eight antennas.
Credit: NASA

Even before we’re aware of heart trouble or related health issues, our bodies give off warning signs in the form of vibrations. Technology to detect these signals has ranged from electrodes and patches to watches. Now, an innovative wall-mounted technology is capable of monitoring vital signs. Advanced TeleSensors Inc. developed the Cardi/o Monitor with an exclusive license from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. 

Over the course of five years, NASA engineers created a small, inexpensive, contactless device to measure vital signs, a challenging task partly because monitoring heart rate requires picking out motions of about one three-thousandth of an inch, which are easily swamped by other movement in the environment.  

By the late 1990s, hardware and computing technology could meet the challenge, and the NASA JPL team created a prototype the size of a thick textbook. It would emit a radio beam toward a stationary person, working similarly to a radar, and algorithms differentiated cardiac and respiratory activity from the “noise” of other movements.  

When Sajol Ghoshal, now CEO of Austin, Texas-based Advanced TeleSensors, participated in a demonstration of the prototype, he saw the potential for in-home monitoring. By then, developing an affordable device was possible due to the miniaturization of sensors and computing technology.  

A square shaped device on a trapezoidal mount, "Cardi/o" is imprinted on the surface
The Cardi/o vital sign monitor uses NASA-developed technology to continually monitor vital signs. The data collected can be sent directly to medical care providers, cutting down on the number of home healthcare visits.
Credit: Advanced TeleSensors Inc.

The Cardi/o Monitor is 3 inches square and mounts to a ceiling or wall. It can detect vital signs from up to 10 feet. Multiple devices can be scattered throughout a house, with a smartphone app controlling settings and displaying all data on a single dashboard. The algorithms NASA developed detect heartbeat and respiration, and the company added heart rate variability detection that indicates stress and sleep apnea.  

If there’s an anomaly, such as a dramatic heart rate increase, an alert in the app calls attention to the situation. Up to six months of data is stored in a secure cloud, making it accessible to healthcare providers. This limits the need for regular in-person visits, which is particularly important for conditions such as infectious diseases, which can put medical professionals and other patients at risk.  

Through the commercialization of this life-preserving technology, NASA is at the heart of advancing health solutions.  

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Last Updated

Apr 07, 2025

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