NFC在医疗设备通信和电力输送中的适用性

Eric Freudenthal, David Herrera, F. Kautz, Carlos Natividad, A. Ogrey, Justin Sipla, Abimael Sosa, Carlos Betancourt, Leonardo Estevez, A. Ogrey
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引用次数: 33

摘要

近场通信(NFC)是一种13.56 MHz电感耦合电力传输和通信协议,扩展了ISO 14443 RFID标准。低成本的NFC扫描器子系统预计将在未来几代商用蜂窝电话中广泛应用。我们认为这种新兴的基础设施有潜力为一系列医疗设备提供方便和低成本的电力分配和通信渠道。例如,手机内的NFC设备可以将从除颤器起搏器收集的测量数据传递给监测医生,远程控制胰岛素泵,或激活植入的神经模拟系统。NFC设备在不需要提供电池供电来支持通信的情况下,对其他植入式电子设备提出了类似的生物相容性挑战。此外,NFC通信子系统的功率独立性提供了一种防御措施,防止潜在的拒绝服务攻击,这种攻击消耗功率以释放容量有限的电源。13.56 MHz频段与人体和动物组织的相互作用最小。我们进行了几次成功的概念验证实验,与植入人体尸体多个位置的ISO 14443标签进行通信。磁场强度随距离天线的立方而衰减,限制了潜在窃听者的范围。目前,NFC协议没有为植入式医疗应用提供一套适当的隐私属性。然而,NFC设备是使用嵌入式通用处理器实现的,因此只需要修改软件就可以支持增强隐私的协议扩展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Suitability of NFC for Medical Device Communication and Power Delivery
Near Field Communications (NFC) is a 13.56 MHz inductively coupled power delivery and communication protocol that extends the ISO 14443 RFID standard. Low cost NFC scanner subsystems are anticipated to be widely incorporated in coming generations of commodity cellular phones. We consider the potential of this emerging infrastructure to provide convenient and low cost power distribution and communication channels for a range of medical devices. For example, an NFC device within a cell phone could relay measurements collected from a defibrillator-pacemaker to a monitoring physician, remotely control an insulin pump, or activate an implanted neural simulation system. NFC devices pose similar bio-compatibility challenges to other implanted electronics without requiring the provisioning of battery power to support communication. Furthermore, an NFC communication subsystem's power-independence provides a measure of defense against potential denial-of-service attacks that consume power in order to discharge a capacity-limited power source. The 13.56 MHz band has minimal interaction with human and animal tissues. We conducted several successful proof-of- concept experiments communicating with with ISO 14443 tags implanted at multiple locations within a human cadaver. Magnetic field strength decays with the cube of distance-to- antenna, limiting limits the range of potential eavesdroppers. At present, NFC protocols do not provide an appropriate set of privacy properties for implanted medical applications. However, NFC devices are implemented using embedded general purpose processors and thus only software modifications would be required to support protocol extensions with enhanced privacy.
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