Apple’s hiring spree of biosensor experts continues with the latest revelation pointing to another high-profile executive hire.

According to the newest scoop byNetworkWorld, the former chief technology officer of non-invasive patient monitoring company Cercacor, Marcelo Lamego, has joined Apple’siWatchteam.

iWatch concept (Sketch, Todd Hamilton 001)

Apple has been hiring some of the world’s top experts insleep research,medical devicesandbiosensing, fueling speculation that its rumored wearable device willfocus on health and fitness tracking…

NetworkWorldspotted an interesting employee change on Lamego’s public LinkedIn profile, indicating he began working at Apple this January in R&D capacity.

marcelo_lamego

Lamego invented more than 70 patent applications/patents related to“optimization and signal processing, devices, sensors and patient monitoring technologies,”according to his profile on the popular social network for people in professional occupations.

As Cercacor’s chief technical officer, Lamego helped develop its Pronto-7 non-invasive medical device capable of measuring a patient’s oxygen saturation and hemoglobin levels, along with pulse rates.

pronto7

Prior to joining Cercacor, Lamego worked as a Research Scientist at Masimo, which now sells the Pronto-7 device. Masimo was spun off of Cercacor in the late 1990s.

While at Masimo, Lamego was in charge of the development of the company’s Rainbow Technology, a non-invasive monitoring platform which can assess multiple blood constituents and physiologic parameters that previously required invasive or complicated procedures.

It recently came to light that Apple last summerhired Michael O’Reilly, Masimo’s former Chief Medical Officer and Executive VP for Medical Affairs whose current role at Apple does not“solely focus on the iWatch project,”according to9to5Mac.

NetworkWorld adds this:

Another example of a Masimo product which utilizes the Rainbow Technology platform comes in the form of a neck patch that continuously measures a patient’s respiration rate and works to alert physicians “to the first sign of an abnormal or compromised breathing pattern.”

Other notable hires NetworkWorld spotted:

And here’s the sophisticated Star Trek-like Acuvein device Liu helped develop.

A quick look atApple’s recent iWatch-related hiresindicates that the team size has grown to 200 hardware and software engineers, double the initial 100 people on the iWatch team as reported byBloomberg a year ago.

According to Apple’s boss Tim Cook, wearable technologies are“ripe for exploration”asthe whole sensor field“is going to explode”. While it’s currently“a little all over the place”, the CEO said that“with the arc of time, it will become clearer”.