Health and Biometric

Reliable biometric sensors for medical devices

Precise health monitoring sensors support accurate diagnosis and meet regulatory standards for medical applications.

A close-up view of a medical patient monitor displaying real-time vital signs with a healthcare professional standing in the background.
A medical professional in a white coat monitors vital sign readings on a digital hospital patient display screen.

Precise health monitoring sensors support accurate diagnosis and meet regulatory standards for medical applications.

Health Sensors That Meet Healthcare Performance and Regulatory Requirements

Sensor performance directly affects clinical decisions and patient outcomes. Medical device applications demand sensors that deliver accuracy across patient populations and operating conditions. You need reliable measurements for diagnostic equipment, patient monitoring systems, wearable devices and therapeutic equipment.

Healthcare sensing faces unique challenges. Regulatory requirements mandate documented performance and traceability, and environmental variations affect sensor output and baseline readings. The right sensor selection depends on your measurement requirements, regulatory constraints, patient contact conditions and device operating environment.

Digital bedside monitor displaying vital signs for a blurred patient resting in a hospital bed.

Support Accurate Diagnosis With Reliable Physiological Measurements

Diagnostic equipment requires sensors that provide consistent measurements across different patients and conditions. Wearable devices monitor patient activity, sleep patterns and biometric indicators during normal daily routines. Physiological monitoring tracks vital signs including heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate and oxygen saturation.

 

Continuous monitoring detects changes in patient condition that require clinical intervention. Sensor accuracy affects diagnostic confidence and treatment decisions. Repeatability between measurements helps you track patient progress over time, and reliable biometric sensing supports the clinical decision-making that improves patient outcomes.

A clinical dialysis machine stands next to a hospital bed with a patient monitor displaying vital signs in a sterile medical treatment room.

Meet Medical Device Regulatory Standards

Regulatory agencies require documented sensor performance for medical device approvals. FDA submissions need sensor specifications, testing data and quality system documentation. ISO 13485 compliance¹ demonstrates manufacturing quality controls. Biocompatibility testing verifies materials meet ISO 10993 requirements² for patient contact. 

A clean hospital room featuring a high-tech patient bed surrounded by advanced medical monitoring equipment and life-support systems.

Maintain Measurement Quality Through Calibration Stability

Biometric sensors face calibration challenges from biological variability and environmental factors.

 

  • Temperature changes affect sensor output and baseline readings.
  • Humidity and perspiration alter skin impedance and signal coupling.
  • Motion artifacts corrupt measurements during patient movement.
  • Baseline drift requires frequent recalibration that interrupts monitoring.

 

Advanced calibration algorithms compensate for environmental variations automatically. Self-checking routines verify sensor function and measurement quality, and stable sensing elements maintain accuracy across wide temperature ranges.

 

Calibration stability reduces maintenance requirements and improves measurement confidence in demanding healthcare applications.

A focused nurse in protective gear monitors a critically ill patient using medical equipment in a modern hospital intensive care unit.

Protect Patient Safety With Biocompatible Materials

Patient contact sensors require materials that prevent allergic reactions and tissue irritation. Biocompatibility testing evaluates cytotoxicity, sensitization and irritation potential.

 

  • Medical-grade plastics and elastomers minimize adverse skin responses.
  • Adhesive systems balance secure attachment with gentle removal. • Coating technologies reduce protein adsorption and bacterial adhesion.
  • Hypoallergenic designs accommodate patients with latex allergies and chemical sensitivities.

 

Material selection considers contact duration, tissue type and patient sensitivity. Proper material selection supports safe long-term patient contact in monitoring and therapeutic applications.

Frequently Asked Questions About Biometric Sensors

Biocompatibility requirements depend on contact duration and tissue type, per ISO 10993.

 

  • Limited contact devices (under 24 hours) require cytotoxicity, sensitization and irritation testing.
  • Extended contact devices (24 hours to 30 days) need additional tests for systemic toxicity and subchronic effects.
  • Permanent implants require comprehensive testing including implantation studies and hemocompatibility.

 

Material selection affects testing scope and approval pathways. Medical-grade polymers and elastomers typically have established biocompatibility profiles. Custom materials may require complete test batteries. Testing must be conducted at accredited laboratories following Good Laboratory Practices. 

Clinical environments present measurement challenges from temperature variations, humidity changes, and electromagnetic interference.

 

Body heat raises sensor temperature by 10-15°C from ambient conditions. • Humidity from perspiration affects skin impedance measurements.

 

  • Hospital equipment generates electromagnetic fields that couple into sensor signals.
  • Motion artifacts from patient movement corrupt biometric readings.
  • Ambient light interferes with optical sensing methods.

 

Calibration algorithms compensate for known environmental effects. Shielding and filtering reduce electromagnetic interference. Self-diagnostic routines detect abnormal environmental conditions. 

Developing a medical device?

Contact our medical device team to discuss sensor requirements and regulatory support