12,696 research outputs found

    A novel robust index to assess beat-to-beat variability in heart rate time-series analysis

    Get PDF
    A new index is proposed to estimate the variance of the differentiated heart rate (RR) time series from its truncated histogram. The index is more robust to artifacts than the standard deviation of the differentiated RR time series (rMSDD) and, unlike the pNN50, does not saturate for very high or very low heart rate variability.Peer Reviewe

    Multivariate assessment of linear and non-linear causal coupling pathways within the central-autonomic-network in patients suffering from schizophrenia

    Get PDF
    Im Bereich der Zeitreihenanalyse richtet sich das Interesse zunehmend darauf, wie Einblicke in die Interaktions- und Regulationsprozesse von pathophysiologischen- und physiologischen Zuständen erlangt werden können. Neuste Fortschritte in der nichtlinearen Dynamik, der Informationstheorie und der Netzwerktheorie liefern dabei fundiertes Wissen über Kopplungswege innerhalb (patho)physiologischer (Sub)Systeme. Kopplungsanalysen zielen darauf ab, ein besseres Verständnis dafür zu erlangen, wie die verschiedenen integrierten regulatorischen (Sub)Systeme mit ihren komplexen Strukturen und Regulationsmechanismen das globale Verhalten und die unterschiedlichen physiologischen Funktionen auf der Ebene des Organismus beschreiben. Insbesondere die Erfassung und Quantifizierung der Kopplungsstärke und -richtung sind wesentliche Aspekte für ein detaillierteres Verständnis physiologischer Regulationsprozesse. Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Charakterisierung kurzfristiger unmittelbarer zentral-autonomer Kopplungspfade (top-to-bottom und bottom to top) durch die Kopplungsanalysen der Herzfrequenz, des systolischen Blutdrucks, der Atmung und zentraler Aktivität (EEG) bei schizophrenen Patienten und Gesunden. Dafür wurden in dieser Arbeit neue multivariate kausale und nicht-kausale, lineare und nicht-lineare Kopplungsanalyseverfahren (HRJSD, mHRJSD, NSTPDC) entwickelt, die in der Lage sind, die Kopplungsstärke und -richtung, sowie deterministische regulatorische Kopplungsmuster innerhalb des zentralen-autonomen Netzwerks zu quantifizieren und zu klassifizieren. Diese Kopplungsanalyseverfahren haben ihre eigenen Besonderheiten, die sie einzigartig machen, auch im Vergleich zu etablierten Kopplungsverfahren. Sie erweitern das Spektrum neuartiger Kopplungsansätze für die Biosignalanalyse und tragen auf ihre Weise zur Gewinnung detaillierter Informationen und damit zu einer verbesserten Diagnostik/Therapie bei. Die Hauptergebnisse dieser Arbeit zeigen signifikant schwächere nichtlineare zentral-kardiovaskuläre und zentral-kardiorespiratorische Kopplungswege und einen signifikant stärkeren linearen zentralen Informationsfluss in Richtung des Herzkreislaufsystems auf, sowie einen signifikant stärkeren linearen respiratorischen Informationsfluss in Richtung des zentralen Nervensystems in der Schizophrenie im Vergleich zu Gesunden. Die detaillierten Erkenntnisse darüber, wie die verschiedenen zentral-autonomen Netzwerke mit paranoider Schizophrenie assoziiert sind, können zu einem besseren Verständnis darüber führen, wie zentrale Aktivierung und autonome Reaktionen und/oder Aktivierung in physiologischen Netzwerken unter pathophysiologischen Bedingungen zusammenhängen.In the field of time series analysis, increasing interest focuses on insights gained how the coupling pathways of regulatory mechanisms work in healthy and ill states. Recent advances in non-linear dynamics, information theory and network theory lead to a new sophisticated body of knowledge about coupling pathways within (patho)physiological (sub)systems. Coupling analyses aim to provide a better understanding of how the different integrated physiological (sub)systems, with their complex structures and regulatory mechanisms, describe the global behaviour and distinct physiological functions at the organism level. In particular, the detection and quantification of the coupling strength and direction are important aspects for a more detailed understanding of physiological regulatory processes. This thesis aimed to characterize short-term instantaneous central-autonomic-network coupling pathways (top-to-bottom and bottom to top) by analysing the coupling of heart rate, systolic blood pressure, respiration and central activity (EEG) in schizophrenic patients and healthy participants. Therefore, new multivariate causal and non-causal linear and non-linear coupling approaches (HRJSD, mHRJSD, NSTPDC) that are able to determine the coupling strength and direction were developed. Whereby, the HRJSD and mHRJSD approaches allow the quantification and classification of deterministic regulatory coupling patterns within and between the cardiovascular- the cardiorespiratory system and the central-autonomic-network were developed. These coupling approaches have their own unique features, even as compared to well-established coupling approaches. They expand the spectrum of novel coupling approaches for biosignal analysis and thus contribute in their own way to detailed information obtained, and thereby contribute to improved diagnostics/therapy. The main findings of this thesis revealed significantly weaker non-linear central-cardiovascular and central-cardiorespiratory coupling pathways, and significantly stronger linear central information flow in the direction of the cardiac- and vascular system, and a significantly stronger linear respiratory information transfer towards the central nervous system in schizophrenia in comparison to healthy participants. This thesis provides an enhanced understanding of the interrelationship of central and autonomic regulatory mechanisms in schizophrenia. The detailed findings on how variously-pronounced, central-autonomic-network pathways are associated with paranoid schizophrenia may enable a better understanding on how central activation and autonomic responses and/or activation are connected in physiology networks under pathophysiological conditions

    Techniques for ventricular repolarization instability assessment from the ECG

    Get PDF
    Instabilities in ventricular repolarization have been documented to be tightly linked to arrhythmia vulnera- bility. Translation of the information contained in the repolar- ization phase of the electrocardiogram (ECG) into valuable clinical decision-making tools remains challenging. This work aims at providing an overview of the last advances in the pro- posal and quantification of ECG-derived indices that describe repolarization properties and whose alterations are related with threatening arrhythmogenic conditions. A review of the state of the art is provided, spanning from the electrophysio- logical basis of ventricular repolarization to its characteriza- tion on the surface ECG through a set of temporal and spatial risk markers

    Detection of atrial fibrillation episodes in long-term heart rhythm signals using a support vector machine

    Get PDF
    Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a serious heart arrhythmia leading to a significant increase of the risk for occurrence of ischemic stroke. Clinically, the AF episode is recognized in an electrocardiogram. However, detection of asymptomatic AF, which requires a long-term monitoring, is more efficient when based on irregularity of beat-to-beat intervals estimated by the heart rate (HR) features. Automated classification of heartbeats into AF and non-AF by means of the Lagrangian Support Vector Machine has been proposed. The classifier input vector consisted of sixteen features, including four coefficients very sensitive to beat-to-beat heart changes, taken from the fetal heart rate analysis in perinatal medicine. Effectiveness of the proposed classifier has been verified on the MIT-BIH Atrial Fibrillation Database. Designing of the LSVM classifier using very large number of feature vectors requires extreme computational efforts. Therefore, an original approach has been proposed to determine a training set of the smallest possible size that still would guarantee a high quality of AF detection. It enables to obtain satisfactory results using only 1.39% of all heartbeats as the training data. Post-processing stage based on aggregation of classified heartbeats into AF episodes has been applied to provide more reliable information on patient risk. Results obtained during the testing phase showed the sensitivity of 98.94%, positive predictive value of 98.39%, and classification accuracy of 98.86%.Web of Science203art. no. 76

    A Real-Time Automated Point-Process Method for the Detection and Correction of Erroneous and Ectopic Heartbeats

    Get PDF
    The presence of recurring arrhythmic events (also known as cardiac dysrhythmia or irregular heartbeats), as well as erroneous beat detection due to low signal quality, significantly affects estimation of both time and frequency domain indices of heart rate variability (HRV). A reliable, real-time classification and correction of ECG-derived heartbeats is a necessary prerequisite for an accurate online monitoring of HRV and cardiovascular control. We have developed a novel point-process-based method for real-time R-R interval error detection and correction. Given an R-wave event, we assume that the length of the next R-R interval follows a physiologically motivated, time-varying inverse Gaussian probability distribution. We then devise an instantaneous automated detection and correction procedure for erroneous and arrhythmic beats by using the information on the probability of occurrence of the observed beat provided by the model. We test our algorithm over two datasets from the PhysioNet archive. The Fantasia normal rhythm database is artificially corrupted with known erroneous beats to test both the detection procedure and correction procedure. The benchmark MIT-BIH Arrhythmia database is further considered to test the detection procedure of real arrhythmic events and compare it with results from previously published algorithms. Our automated algorithm represents an improvement over previous procedures, with best specificity for the detection of correct beats, as well as highest sensitivity to missed and extra beats, artificially misplaced beats, and for real arrhythmic events. A near-optimal heartbeat classification and correction, together with the ability to adapt to time-varying changes of heartbeat dynamics in an online fashion, may provide a solid base for building a more reliable real-time HRV monitoring device. © 1964-2012 IEEE

    A Time-Varying Non-Parametric Methodology for Assessing Changes in QT Variability Unrelated to Heart Rate Variability

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVE: To propose and test a novel methodology to measure changes in QT interval variability (QTV) unrelated to RR interval variability (RRV) in non-stationary conditions. METHODS: Time-frequency coherent and residual spectra representing QTV related (QTVrRRV) and unrelated (QTVuRRV) to RRV, respectively, are estimated using time-frequency Cohen's class distributions. The proposed approach decomposes the non-stationary output spectrum of any two-input one-output model with uncorrelated inputs into two spectra representing the information related and unrelated to one of the two inputs, respectively. An algorithm to correct for the bias of the time-frequency coherence function between QTV and RRV is proposed to provide accurate estimates of both QTVuRRV and QTVrRRV. Two simulation studies were conducted to assess the methodology in challenging non-stationary conditions and data recorded during head-up tilt in 16 healthy volunteers were analyzed. RESULTS: In the simulation studies, QTVuRRV changes were tracked with only a minor delay due to the filtering necessary to estimate the non-stationary spectra. The correlation coefficient between theoretical and estimated patterns was >0.92 even for extremely noisy recordings (SNR in QTV =-10dB). During head-up tilt, QTVrRRV explained the largest proportion of QTV, whereas QTVuRRV showed higher relative increase than QTV or QTVrRRV in all spectral bands (P<0.05 for most pairwise comparisons). CONCLUSION: The proposed approach accurately tracks changes in QTVuRRV. Head-up tilt induced a slightly greater increase in QTVuRRV than in QTVrRRV. SIGNIFICANCE: The proposed index QTVuRRV may represent an indirect measure of intrinsic ventricular repolarization variability, a marker of cardiac instability associated with sympathetic ventricular modulation and sudden cardiac death

    ECG Morphological Variability in Beat Space for Risk Stratification After Acute Coronary Syndrome

    Get PDF
    Background: Identification of patients who are at high risk of adverse cardiovascular events after an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) remains a major challenge in clinical cardiology. We hypothesized that quantifying variability in electrocardiogram (ECG) morphology may improve risk stratification post‐ACS. Methods and Results: We developed a new metric to quantify beat‐to‐beat morphologic changes in the ECG: morphologic variability in beat space (MVB), and compared our metric to published ECG metrics (heart rate variability [HRV], deceleration capacity [DC], T‐wave alternans, heart rate turbulence, and severe autonomic failure). We tested the ability of these metrics to identify patients at high risk of cardiovascular death (CVD) using 1082 patients (1‐year CVD rate, 4.5%) from the MERLIN‐TIMI 36 (Metabolic Efficiency with Ranolazine for Less Ischemia in Non‐ST‐Elevation Acute Coronary Syndrome—Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 36) clinical trial. DC, HRV/low frequency–high frequency, and MVB were all associated with CVD (hazard ratios [HRs] from 2.1 to 2.3 [P<0.05 for all] after adjusting for the TIMI risk score [TRS], left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF], and B‐type natriuretic peptide [BNP]). In a cohort with low‐to‐moderate TRS (N=864; 1‐year CVD rate, 2.7%), only MVB was significantly associated with CVD (HR, 3.0; P=0.01, after adjusting for LVEF and BNP). Conclusions: ECG morphological variability in beat space contains prognostic information complementary to the clinical variables, LVEF and BNP, in patients with low‐to‐moderate TRS. ECG metrics could help to risk stratify patients who might not otherwise be considered at high risk of CVD post‐ACS

    Fetal electrocardiograms, direct and abdominal with reference heartbeat annotations

    Get PDF
    Monitoring fetal heart rate (FHR) variability plays a fundamental role in fetal state assessment. Reliable FHR signal can be obtained from an invasive direct fetal electrocardiogram (FECG), but this is limited to labour. Alternative abdominal (indirect) FECG signals can be recorded during pregnancy and labour. Quality, however, is much lower and the maternal heart and uterine contractions provide sources of interference. Here, we present ten twenty-minute pregnancy signals and 12 five-minute labour signals. Abdominal FECG and reference direct FECG were recorded simultaneously during labour. Reference pregnancy signal data came from an automated detector and were corrected by clinical experts. The resulting dataset exhibits a large variety of interferences and clinically significant FHR patterns. We thus provide the scientific community with access to bioelectrical fetal heart activity signals that may enable the development of new methods for FECG signals analysis, and may ultimately advance the use and accuracy of abdominal electrocardiography methods.Web of Science71art. no. 20

    A novel technique for fetal heart rate estimation from Doppler ultrasound signal

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The currently used fetal monitoring instrumentation that is based on Doppler ultrasound technique provides the fetal heart rate (FHR) signal with limited accuracy. It is particularly noticeable as significant decrease of clinically important feature - the variability of FHR signal. The aim of our work was to develop a novel efficient technique for processing of the ultrasound signal, which could estimate the cardiac cycle duration with accuracy comparable to a direct electrocardiography.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We have proposed a new technique which provides the true beat-to-beat values of the FHR signal through multiple measurement of a given cardiac cycle in the ultrasound signal. The method consists in three steps: the dynamic adjustment of autocorrelation window, the adaptive autocorrelation peak detection and determination of beat-to-beat intervals. The estimated fetal heart rate values and calculated indices describing variability of FHR, were compared to the reference data obtained from the direct fetal electrocardiogram, as well as to another method for FHR estimation.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The results revealed that our method increases the accuracy in comparison to currently used fetal monitoring instrumentation, and thus enables to calculate reliable parameters describing the variability of FHR. Relating these results to the other method for FHR estimation we showed that in our approach a much lower number of measured cardiac cycles was rejected as being invalid.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The proposed method for fetal heart rate determination on a beat-to-beat basis offers a high accuracy of the heart interval measurement enabling reliable quantitative assessment of the FHR variability, at the same time reducing the number of invalid cardiac cycle measurements.</p
    corecore