There is provided a glucose monitoring method and apparatus based on the
principle of Wavelength-Modulated Differential Laser Photothermal
Radiometry (WM-DPTR). Two intensity modulated laser beams operating in
tandem at specific mid-infrared (IR) wavelengths and current-modulated
synchronously by two electrical waveforms 180 degrees out-of-phase, are
used to interrogate the tissue surface. The laser wavelengths are
selected to absorb in the mid infrared range (8.5-10.5 .mu.m) where the
glucose spectrum exhibits a discrete absorption band. The differential
thermal-wave signal generated by the tissue sample through modulated
absorption between two specific wavelengths within the band (for example,
the peak at 9.6 and the nearest baseline at 10.5 .mu.m) lead to minute
changes in sample temperature and to non-equilibrium blackbody radiation
emission. This modulated emission is measured with a broadband infrared
detector. The detector is coupled to a lock-in amplifier for signal
demodulation. Any glucose concentration increases will be registered as
differential photothermal signals above the fully suppressed signal
baseline due to increased absorption at the probed peak or near-peak of
the band at 9.6 .mu.m at the selected wavelength modulation frequency.
The emphasis is on the ability to monitor blood glucose levels in
diabetic patients in a non-invasive, non-contacting manner with
differential signal generation methods for real-time baseline
corrections, a crucial feature toward precise and universal calibration
(independent of person-to-person contact, skin, temperature or
IR-emission variations) in order to offer accurate absolute glucose
concentration readings.