New Smart Glasses Allow Nurses To See Veins Through Skin 124
Lucas123 writes "Epson and Evena Medical today unveiled a new smart-glass technology that allows nurses to see 'through' a patient's skin to the vasculature beneath in order to make intravenous placement easier. The Eyes-On Glasses System is based on Epson's Moverio Smart Glasses Technology, an Android-based, see-through wearable display launched earlier this year that allows users to interact with apps and games. The glasses use near-infrared light to highlight deoxygenated hemoglobin in a patient's veins and capture the images with two stereoscopic cameras. The cameras then project the vein images onto the see-through glass screens. The glasses can store the images and video and transfer them wirelessly to a patient's electronic health record, and they also come with dual built-in speakers for video conferencing."
But can they see why (Score:3, Funny)
Kids love cinemon toast crunch?
Does the glasses pose any danger to the eyes ? (Score:2)
From TFA:
The Eyes-On Glasses System is based on Epson's Moverio Smart Glasses Technology, an Android-based, see-through wearable display launched earlier this year that allows users to interact with apps and games.
That technology from Epson when applied to game, users do not put on those wearable display for hours and hours every single day, they only put them on when they play games.
On the other hand, nurses working in the hospitals may end up wearing the glasses which projects infrared lights many hours each days.
My question being --- Would prolonged exposure to infrared light poses any danger on the eyes of the wearer ?
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1) if they only need these things when inserting an IV, they only need to be worn when needed - nurses don't do IVs all day long. a single gaming session is going to last way longer than the 10 seconds it takes to stick a needle in your arm... and it's only for IVs not an injection (which a probably more common)
2) human eyes cannot see the infrared spectrum.. so what's the risk?
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We can't see it but it still burns our skin.
I can't see a bullet coming at me, does that mean it won't hurt me?
Re:Does the glasses pose any danger to the eyes ? (Score:4, Informative)
So does visible light of similar intensity.
There is very little difference between near infrared and the visible spectrum. Just because our rods and cones don't react to the different wavelength doesn't make it any more dangerous. The exception to this rule are powerful near IR lasers that appear to the eye as faint red light sources and don't trigger pupil contraction and aversion reflexes.
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"Just because our rods and cones don't react to the different wavelength doesn't make it any more dangerous."
You forgot the other exception. The other end of our color range. We see down to ~390nm on the blue end of the spectrum. But ultraviolet light at ~240nm will break down our DNA and cause cancer, kill cells, etc.
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2) human eyes cannot see the infrared spectrum.. so what's the risk?
Human eyes can also not see the ultraviolet spectrum. Or the microwave spectrum. As Weird Al says, stick your head in the microwave and get yourself a tan.
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Those sort of injections are usually intramuscular rather than intravenous - phlebotomists however stick needles in veins all day long.
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phlebotomists
Heh. Botom.
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Those are intramuscular injections, not IV's. You're trying to avoid a vein with those.
Oh, never mind then, it clearly isn't useful to see the veins when you are trying to avoid them.
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Re:Does the glasses pose any danger to the eyes ? (Score:4, Informative)
From TFA:
That technology from Epson when applied to game, users do not put on those wearable display for hours and hours every single day, they only put them on when they play games.
On the other hand, nurses working in the hospitals may end up wearing the glasses which projects infrared lights many hours each days.
My question being --- Would prolonged exposure to infrared light poses any danger on the eyes of the wearer ?
Unlikely. IR light has a longer wavelength and thus less energy than normal "visible" light, this is why we can't see in the infrared - the photons are not energetic enough to cause a conformal change in one of the double bonds in rhodopsin [wikipedia.org]. This also partial explains why we can't see in the UV spectrum. The only variable will be the intensity of the light potentially causing thermal damage, but I doubt this would be that powerful enough for that. In addition, starting IVs is not the only thing nurses do....I'd guestimate that it is only about 5% of their daily work load on the general med-surg floors (where most patients have an IV already) and probably no more than 10-15% of the ED RNs.
Re:Does the glasses pose any danger to the eyes ? (Score:5, Informative)
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I'd have to say that this system is slightly less dangerous than a warm blanket, but slightly more dangerous than looking a person with the naked eye.
Near infrared radiation must be stopped!
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My God, someone here who can read and comprehend. Even the summary stated things well enough. Congratulations. For a while I was wondering if anyone here could follow simple prose.
So, also, the issue of long-term effects for phlebotomists would not apply either. The matter might be with proper focusing and composition of the image so as to avoid eyestrain. At my local hospital, from what I gathered, they typically might spend a couple of hours in the morning and another in the afternoon collecting bloo
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Additionally, your eyes are exposed to infrared light constantly. It just happens that your eyes don't "see" it.
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Actually try this: take welder googles (not mask), remove the lenses and replace them with stacked sheets of red and blue light filter (Rosco was the brand I used). This will block almost all visible light but let near-infrared come through. Wear these glasses in bright daylight, just never ever stare at the sun, really just don't. However, the result is, that you will see
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My question being --- Would prolonged exposure to infrared light poses any danger on the eyes of the wearer ?
How did you come to the conclusion that the wearer is the one who'd be exposed?
This is amazing (Score:2, Funny)
Can't wait for the nurses "hey, I didn't know you were THAT happy to see me" jokes
Hey, if this means... (Score:5, Interesting)
Had to go into the hospital for the first time in ages the other day, and it took about five or six sticks -- including the kind where you can see them feeling around for anything once the needle's already in you -- before they hit the vein. And I'm skinny, as well, at least in the places where they stick me. Can't begin to imagine what it's like if your veins are invisible.
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...that they don't have to play "Go Fish" in my arm every time I get an IV in, I'm all for it, unintended consequences be damned.
Had to go into the hospital for the first time in ages the other day, and it took about five or six sticks -- including the kind where you can see them feeling around for anything once the needle's already in you -- before they hit the vein. And I'm skinny, as well, at least in the places where they stick me. Can't begin to imagine what it's like if your veins are invisible.
I have very hard to find veins. 2 hours of poking and prodding is about how long it takes them to decide to take my blood from an artery. I tell them before hand, but they never listen. Of course, it will still probably be 2 or 3 years before hospitals get this sort of tech, let alone little clinics.
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I have heard of widespread deployment of the base technology in IHC hospitals in Salt Lake City already. The glasses part is just a new adaptation.
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I don't know what the difference is, but I had an Air Force tech go five tries in each arm and give up, whereupon a doctor smirked at him, picked up the needle and took four tries.
But at the civilian blood shop I use today, it's first try every time.
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My mother worked as a nurse for some time, and she has told me on several occasions that if a vein isn't hit the first try that I should tell them to stop, then ask for someone who knows what they're doing.
I used to donate plasma when I was attending college, and for some time I had no problem; one needle stuck in, draw for 20-ish minutes, done. Then, on the very last time I went there, one of their phlebotomists started fishing (which later left me with a baseball-sized bruise on the inside of my elbow).
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If she's hold a needle with the intent of sticking me, I clearly will not be "happy" to see her.
Was this technology funded by famous stars who can't find their veins anymore?
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Also anyone who's got low blood pressure problems, or who needs so many IV's for medical reasons that they have veins fail. I've certainly had cancer burdened friends on chemo who've had veins become very difficult to find after they've had so many IV's and so many needle sticks for treatment. And with age, people's veins often become more frail and more likely to be damaged.
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Can't wait for the nurses to still poke 700 holes in my arm trying to get the vein, anyway.
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same tech
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Tequila.
Comics (Score:5, Funny)
I am sure that I saw an advert for this towards the back pages of my Fantastic Four comics circa 1982
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DIY IR Goggles! (Score:2)
You can make your own passive IR goggles using "congo blue" and "primary red" lighting gels. They work just the same as the ones in TFA but they require about 1kw/m^2 of external incandecent lighting. Not really hospital friendly but they are fantastic for wandering around the neighbourhood in the summer.
Look for Bill Beaty's IR goggles
Imagine the s3x or the pR0n! (Score:1)
Ohh... wait. I can't get that image off my ... yuk
Sounds familiar (Score:5, Funny)
Haven't we seen stories in this vein before?
(Or not.)
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And they make several commercial devices that do exactly the same. The one we have projects the image on the skin which would seemingly make it easier to use - less parallax issues. This tech has been around for a while. The glasses are the new kink, not sure if it's of any real use.
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it's been common knowledge for a few years now
So making 10 attempts to get the needle into a vein just satisfies your sadistic tendencies? :)
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it's been common knowledge for a few years now
So making 10 attempts to get the needle into a vein just satisfies your sadistic tendencies? :)
Well, we have a rule in our trust that ensures we only have three stabs at a patient before we call an anaesthetist to do the job. I can't speak for my colleagues, but I've only ever needed two attempts... But then, some patients I refer straight on to the anesthetics chap without even bothering :)
This is very handy in emergency situations where it's literally the patient's life on the line if you don't get a needle in.
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This is not a joking matter.
Tech like this can spare those in need a lot of pain.
You insensitive prick.
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That's the best jab you got?
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Half the joke is getting the point in on the first try.
Re:Sounds familiar (Score:5, Funny)
"Insensitive prick"? Well, maybe...but that's none of your darn business. It'll happen to you too one day, just wait and see. Meanwhile, let's have a little respect for our elders...
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The why not automate the whole process. A device that uses ultrasound and infra-red to scan the target region and indicates to the operator when they are over the best location and then automatically quickly inserts the needle to the correct depth at the best target location at exactly the right angle, leaving the nurse to just check on the quality of insertion.
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The comment you were replying to was a joke.
You insensitive clod.
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Brought to you by (Score:2)
the "how the hell did no one think of this before" Department
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The article is grabbing headlines because they packaged it into a eye-glass format.
O2-amp [wordpress.com]
Although perhaps tellingly I can't find any real demo images...
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(Not another) Raspbery Pi comment... (Score:3)
Can't wait to see if this is possible to see this effect with the Raspberry Pi and a Pi NoIR camera [raspberrypi.org], given that you can
use the material from inside a floppy disk as a visible light filter [instructables.com]
More IR filters (Score:2)
you can use the material from inside a floppy disk as a visible light filter
If you have a developed roll of film, the black frame at the ends of the roll is opaque to visible light but transparent to IR.
If you have an old blacklight bulb, the glass is Wood's Glass [wikipedia.org], which blocks visible light but is transparent to IR and UV.
Transmission characteristics of Wood's glass [komar.org]
Re: Karl Pilkington truly is a visionary. (Score:2)
An Idiot Abroad is one of my all time favorite shows. Amazing what he went through.
This is hardly new (Score:4, Interesting)
We already have technology that does this. We have hand-held devices that shine near-infrared light through the skin and make the veins show up just fine.
They have significant problems, which this system shares. Most importantly, they show *all* veins, including all the ones which can't be cannulated because they are too small, too fragile, or too badly scarred. You have to palpate (feel) the vein to assess whether it's suitable, and if you can palpate it, you don't need to see it at all.
Also, they really only work at all on caucasian skin.
Further, this system is kind of ridiculously expensive. Even though the prices have dropped on commodity displays, microprocessors, 3G and wifi, and all those bells and whistles, it's still a complex piece of gear. We may as well pay for a bedside ultrasound which costs no more, is more precise, and is useful for a lot more than just IV starts.
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> Further, this system is kind of ridiculously expensive.
Part of that is because the FDA forces such extreme controls over who can buy them and own them. It cost us more than $10k of background checks, both for the hospital and several individuals that would have access to it, before we were allowed to purchase it. I don't know how much more the storage cabinet that weighs just over 500 pounds cost. Even after that, we can almost never use it because the FDA requires it be kept in that locked cabinet
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Also, the local police objected to it vigorously. The device can make it easier for heroin users to find veins so in the view of the FDA and law enforcement, the device is drug paraphernalia and should be illegal. It's the same reason we were forced to put blue tinted lights in the bathrooms of the hospital. By not doing so they claimed we were encouraging illegal drug use.
Holy shit! Really? Just wow. Is stopping people from doing drugs THIS fucking important? Really? Fuck it, why don't we just buy needles for everyone and let them go at it. This is way too high of a price to pay.
What do we get out of it? More productive members of society? It would appear that society is productive enough considering the number of unemployed and underemployed people that we have. What do we get out of stopping people from abusing drugs when they were already liable to be abusing them anyways
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Killer robots (Score:3)
With enhanced vision to pick out a suitably lethal spot. I'm certain I've seen this hinted at in numerous movies.
Infrared Sees through Clothes now With WIFI (Score:2)
"The glasses can store the images and video and transfer them wirelessly to a patient's electronic health record..."
Today, your health record; Tomorrow, The World! Muaha Ha!
Sooner the better (Score:2)
Man .. I could have done with the last week, they were trying to get a catheter in and had six goes at finding a suitable vein.
Ended up being done by the main anesthetist who did a local and went in deep.
Many times when giving blood they have to have a couple of goes, it can be a pain.
Finding veins easily? (Score:2)
technology shouldn't replace expertise (Score:1)
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Exactly! Unless the Glasses can feel, they are useless.
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They don't surgically remove your fingers when they issue you the glasses. You're allowed to do both...
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And as an EMT, (a profession that generally starts a lot more IVs) I would love to have this tech available. It's not an either or situation. seeing the veins is a great first step to evaluating which one to use. You don't cannulate the first vein you see, you still have to evaluate the suitability of each one, but being able to see them would be a great start. Limiting yourself to palpation based on anatomy can often miss good veins that are a little too deep or not quite where you expect them (not every
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Oh (Score:1)
I remember these (Score:1)
Poked too much (Score:2)
I recently spent far too much time in a hospital and they poked me a lot. A whole lot. Each time they needed to find a vein. I've been asking for technology like this for a long time.
Finding a vein is now a very personalized skill. One doctor who was a real genius at this, has poor sight and hearing, and told me he does it by feel. Others use very bright lights. One nurse, who was the backup when everybody else couldn't find a vein, said she doesn't know how she does it.
For people who need intravenous