These Three Toilets Detection Health Technologies Will Be Clinically Tested In The US, Israel And Japan
Israeli digital health startup OutSense has been awarded a number of patents for key innovations in IoT technology, according to foreign media reports on 23 June. The technology gains life-saving medical insights by analysing human excrement. Ua hoʻopiʻi ka hui i ʻekolu mau patent e uhi ana i nā mea o kāna mea ʻike i ka lua.
Three Toilets Detection Health Technologies
The first OutSense toilets detection health technologies is for the detection of blood hidden in the toilet bowl. This OutSense device uses reflected light from the toilet to determine the optical signature of hidden blood in faeces. Patents for this technology have been granted in the US, ʻEulopa, Iapana a me Kina.
A second toilets detection health technologies has been granted in Europe and applications for this patent are pending in other countries. It allows effective analysis of the many components of faeces and the spatial distribution of blood traces. On the basis of this analysis, Hiki i ka ʻenehana OutSense ke ʻike i ke kumu o ke koko ma ka ʻōpū o ka ʻōpū.
A third patent is pending for a technology that detects the dehydrated composition of urine through the analysis of urine and faeces.
Wahi a OutSense CEO Yfat Scialom, who predicts that “me ka pahū o ka lāʻau kikohoʻe, this kind of monitoring will become the norm”, OutSense says that the technology already approved and pending approval will provide broad protection for a person’s health by non-invasively extracting faeces and hidden blood from the urine. Hidden blood is essential for detecting colorectal cancer, nā maʻi ʻeha a me nā maʻi ʻeha.
Its solution consists of a multispectral optical sensor, kahi kumu kukui a me kahi mea nānā ponoʻī e pili ana i kahi pilina WiFi. The device scans human excrement, identifies the optical footprint of faecal and urine components, sends the data to an AI-based cloud analysis and then provides indications of various diseases with great precision.
OutSense has developed tools to diagnose abnormalities in human excreta. ʻIke i loaʻa mai ke koko i hoʻāʻo ʻia, hui pū ʻia me ka nānā ʻana hou o ka manawa mai ke koko a hiki i ka excretion, hāʻawi i nā kikoʻī o ka pathology bleeding. Its specific patterns can determine whether the bleeding is from a fissure or haemorrhoid, from a polyp, a tumour or from an ulcer.
At the beginning of June, Ua hoʻolaha ʻo OutSense i ka CommuniCare, he hui mālama ola nui me ka ʻoi aku 90 healthcare facilities in the US, e hoʻomaka e hoʻokele i kāna ʻenehana i kēia makahiki. Ma waho aʻe o kēia pailaka, OutSense also plans to conduct clinical trials in Israel and Japan.
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