A Thermopile Sensor Revealed That the Average Peripheral Wrist Skin Temperature of Patients with Major Depressive Disorder at 09:00 Is 2.9 °C Lower than That of Healthy People
Keisuke Watanabe, Shohei Sato, Yusuke Obara, Nobutoshi Kariya, Toshikazu Shinba, Takemi Matsui

TL;DR
A wearable sensor found that people with depression have significantly lower wrist skin temperature in the morning compared to healthy individuals.
Contribution
A novel thermopile sensor revealed a significant morning temperature difference in MDD patients, suggesting potential for early screening.
Findings
At 09:00, MDD patients had a 2.9 °C lower average wrist skin temperature than healthy individuals.
MDD patients showed a 17 beats/min higher average heart rate compared to controls.
A regression model using temperature and heart rate achieved 83.3% sensitivity for MDD detection.
Abstract
Many patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) feel worse in the morning than in the evening. To clarify the differences in morning physiological characteristics between patients with MDD and healthy participants, a wearable device that measures peripheral wrist skin temperature and heart rate (HR) was adopted. The device incorporates a thermopile sensor to measure peripheral wrist skin temperature using infrared radiation emitted from the skin surface. In total, 30 patients diagnosed with MDD and 24 healthy individuals were recruited. From 00:00 to 12:00, participants wore a wrist-worn device on their non-dominant hand. It was discovered that, at 09:00, the average peripheral wrist skin temperature of patients with MDD was significantly lower (by 0.1% [2.9 °C]) than that of healthy individuals. The dramatic decrease in morning (09:00) peripheral wrist skin temperature in patients…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermoregulation and physiological responses · Circadian rhythm and melatonin · Heart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control
