Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Health & Fitness
  5. News

Wild new wearable shines a light through your skin to measure lactate threshold

Add as a preferred source on Google

In case you haven’t noticed, wearable tech is entering a new era. Now that we’re past that initial surge of accelerometer-equipped wristbands, many companies have started thinking beyond simple wrist-borne activity tracking.

Case in point: the BSXinsight. Designed to fit inside a compression sock, this sensor-packed device can record a wide range of different fitness metrics, including heart rate, cadence, pace, calories burned, and lactate threshold.

Recommended Videos

That last one — your lactate threshold — is that moment during a workout where your body can’t flush lactic acid out of your bloodstream faster than it is being produced. Turns out it’s an extremely useful measurement of exercise intensity for training and racing in endurance sports — and the BSXinsight just so happens to be the first and, so far, the only wearable device that can measure it.

To gather this data, the device is first attached to the user’s calf by slipping it into the carrying pocket of a compression sock. It then periodically shines a low-power LED into your skin to analyze the composition of the underlying muscle. Using the right algorithms and a sensor that can detect minute changes in light, the device can tell you exactly how much lactic acid is in your muscle tissue at any given moment.

The BSXinsight, in other words, looks inside your body while you’re exercising to measure biological signals and determine how hard your muscles are working. This data, when analyzed alongside performance data picked up by its other sensors, allows BSXinsight to optimize your workout in real time. It can tell you whether to speed up, slow down, or, when necessary, rest — so that you’re never working harder than you need to be.

BSX wrapped up a successful Kickstarter campaign for the device roughly a year ago, and the device is now available for purchase on the company’s website. Stay tuned for our hands-on review.

Drew Prindle
Former Senior Editor, Features
Drew Prindle is an award-winning writer, editor, and storyteller who currently serves as Senior Features Editor for Digital…
Samsung wants its upcoming Galaxy Watch to be your AI health companion
Ahead of its July 22 Unpacked event, Samsung has teased AI-driven health tracking and upgraded internals for its upcoming smartwatches.
A person wearing the Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra showing the Ultra Analogue watch face.

Samsung's July 22 Galaxy Unpacked event won't be all about new foldables. The company has also started teasing its next-gen smartwatches, and its pitch leans heavily on AI. In a newsroom post published ahead of the event, Samsung promises "a whole new level of effortless wellness," describing the upcoming watches as an "AI-powered health companion."

From tracking to interpreting

Read more
You can paint this wearable on your skin like a tattoo to monitor your heart and brain activity
This tattoo makes you look cooler - and it could save your life too
Painted electrodes on skin

Wearable health trackers have become smaller, smarter and more capable over the years, but they've also remained surprisingly… boring. Whether it's a smartwatch, a chest strap or a sticky ECG patch, most health sensors still rely on bulky hardware that can peel off, irritate the skin or become less accurate once you start sweating. Additionally, there is a shift of technology from plastic wearables/trackers to clothes, which seemingly do the same thing as well. But that is not the story today.

Researchers at Penn State think they've found a far more elegant solution. Instead of sticking another sensor onto your skin, why not simply paint one?

Read more
Pebble is finally catching up on Time 2 orders, and I appreciate the transparency
Here's exactly when your Pebble Time 2 ships, plus what Pebble is doing for the small percentage of watches arriving with hardware problems.
Electronics, Digital Watch, Wristwatch

If you've been refreshing your order tracking page for months, Pebble just gave you an actual date to mark on your calendar. The company's July mega-update reveals exactly when the remaining Pebble Time 2 pre-orders will finally ship.

Beyond shipping updates, the July report also offers a clear look at how the company is handling its return to the smartwatch market. 

Read more