
The Automatic Oxygen Saturation Control System by Adaptive Learning Controller for COVID-19 Patients
Author(s) -
Lubna Farhi,
Farhan Ur Rehman,
Agha Yasir,
Rija Rehman
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
quaid-e-awam university research journal of engineering science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2523-0379
pISSN - 1605-8607
DOI - 10.52584/qrj.1802.20
Subject(s) - pid controller , covid-19 , saturation (graph theory) , oxygen saturation , oxygen , controller (irrigation) , computer science , anesthesia , control theory (sociology) , medicine , control (management) , artificial intelligence , control engineering , engineering , mathematics , chemistry , temperature control , disease , biology , agronomy , organic chemistry , combinatorics , infectious disease (medical specialty)
This paper proposes an adaptive learning control and monitoring of oxygen for patients with breathing complexities and respiratory diseases. By recording the oxygen saturation levels in real-time, this system uses an adaptive learning controller (ALC) to vary the oxygen delivered to the patient and maintains it in an optimum range. In the presented approach, the PID controller gain is tuned with the learning technique to provide improved response time and a proactive approach to oxygen control for the patient. A case study is performed by monitoring the time varying health vitals across different age groups to gain a better understanding of the relationship between these parameters for COVID-19 patients. This information is then used to improve the standard of care provided to patients and reducing the time to recovery. Results show that ALC controls the oxygen saturation within the target range of 90% to 94% SpO2, 77% and 80.1% of the time in patients of age groups 40-50 years old and 50-60 years old, respectively. It also had faster time to recovery to target SpO2 range when the concentration dropped rapidly or when the patient becomes hypoxic as compared to the manual control of the oxygen saturation by the healthcare staff.