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Looxid Labs is working on a brainwave-monitoring headset which is now in the research phase but could be used for treatment of ailments like post-traumatic stress syndrome.

New at CES 2018: wearable tech to boost your health and wellness

From headbands that monitor brainwaves to sensor socks that help to keep track of elderly people and patients going through rehab, technology firms are looking to cash in on the lucrative digital health industry

Wellness

Want to manage your stress? A “neurofeedback” headband could help. Need to be sure your elderly father is taking his medication? Attach a sensor to his sock.

With virtual reality and motion-tracking sensors, the tech world is borrowing some of the gadgetry from self-driving cars, gaming and fitness applications and bringing them to medicine.

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The 2018 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) last week in Las Vegas, included the latest advances in digital health, suggesting promising avenues for treatment, even if many lack fully-fledged medical approval. Tech firms are looking to cash in on a digital health industry estimated at about US$200 billion annually in areas ranging from app-based diagnoses to pain management and telemedicine.

A growing number of start-ups focused on the brain – capturing or “hacking” brainwaves with the goal of improving sports performance, enabling relaxation, aiding sleep, and potentially treating pain, anxiety or other ills.

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“Brain technologies can help people learn and practise meditation,” says Chris Aimone, founder of InteraXon, a Canadian start-up which exhibited its Muse headband aimed at using “neurofeedback” to manage stress and improve athletic performance.

South Korea-based Looxid Labs featured a brainwave-monitoring headset which is now in the research phase, but could be used for treatment of ailments like post-traumatic stress disorder.

“We can use these brain sensors to analyse emotions and stress level,” says Looxid’s Honggu Lee.

Neurofeedback, which teaches self-regulation of brain activity, has been around for decades, but the arrival of low-cost sensors has made it easier to produce affordable consumer devices.

While some exhibitors say their claims are backed by research, a 2016 study said long-term results were still inconclusive.

Sensoria Fitness has introduced a system to use sensors to keep track of old people. Photo: AFP
Tracking the elderly

Some of the same sensor technology being used to help runners track their performance or golfers perfect their swings is now being adapted for medical applications, notably for the elderly.

Sensoria Fitness, a Washington state start-up which has produced wearable tech for runners and soccer players, unveiled a system to use sensors to keep track of old peoples and people in rehabilitation.

By attaching sensors to socks, the system can detect if a patient is taking medication, doing exercises or is in distress.

“If a patient is in distress, it affects their gait,” explains Sensoria founder Davide Vigano.

France-based Helite was at CES with hip airbags designed to deploy when someone falls, protecting their bones.

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A Japanese firm, Xenoma, also aims to help those at risk of falls, as well as people with dementia, by adapting its wearable smart clothing designed initially for golfers.

“We track their movements and, if they go too far, we can find them,” says Xenoma engineer Yihan Qian.

Other firms offer tools for gauging the risk of disease. Maryland-based start-up RightEye announced an eye-tracking assessment in a gaming application to screen for concussions and other brain health problems, with the possibility of early detection indicators for autism and Parkinson’s disease.

Virtual reality therapy

Virtual and augmented reality developed for gaming is being adapted to areas such as rehabilitation and pain management, potentially offering hope for treating opioid addiction.

Brennan Spiegel, research director at the Cedars-Sinai medical centre in Los Angeles, told a CES conference the hospital has seen benefits of VR treatment for pain, which could help in dealing with the opioid addiction crisis ravaging the United States with tens of thousands of deaths annually.

“Over the next three years we will be testing this to see if we can make some inroads in opioid overprescribing,” Spiegel says.

The 2018 Consumer Electronics Show took place last week in Las Vegas. Photo: Xinhua

Amid optimism, some medical professionals say regulations or standards are needed to manage the explosion of new medical technologies.

“The consumer is going to get blindsided sooner or later by a mobile health app that either spews its data out inappropriately or will create a harmful outcome from a clinician,” says James Mault, chief medical officer at Qualcomm Life, the digital health division of the chip making giant.

Mault says the tech sector needs to “take ownership and leadership” in ensuring integrity of medical apps.

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