134 research outputs found

    A Unified Point Process Probabilistic Framework to Assess Heartbeat Dynamics and Autonomic Cardiovascular Control

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    In recent years, time-varying inhomogeneous point process models have been introduced for assessment of instantaneous heartbeat dynamics as well as specific cardiovascular control mechanisms and hemodynamics. Assessment of the model’s statistics is established through the Wiener-Volterra theory and a multivariate autoregressive (AR) structure. A variety of instantaneous cardiovascular metrics, such as heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (HRV), respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), and baroreceptor-cardiac reflex (baroreflex) sensitivity (BRS), are derived within a parametric framework and instantaneously updated with adaptive and local maximum likelihood estimation algorithms. Inclusion of second-order non-linearities, with subsequent bispectral quantification in the frequency domain, further allows for definition of instantaneous metrics of non-linearity. We here present a comprehensive review of the devised methods as applied to experimental recordings from healthy subjects during propofol anesthesia. Collective results reveal interesting dynamic trends across the different pharmacological interventions operated within each anesthesia session, confirming the ability of the algorithm to track important changes in cardiorespiratory elicited interactions, and pointing at our mathematical approach as a promising monitoring tool for an accurate, non-invasive assessment in clinical practice. We also discuss the limitations and other alternative modeling strategies of our point process approach

    Dynamic Assessment of Baroreflex Control of Heart Rate During Induction of Propofol Anesthesia Using a Point Process Method

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    In this article, we present a point process method to assess dynamic baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) by estimating the baroreflex gain as focal component of a simplified closed-loop model of the cardiovascular system. Specifically, an inverse Gaussian probability distribution is used to model the heartbeat interval, whereas the instantaneous mean is identified by linear and bilinear bivariate regressions on both the previous R−R intervals (RR) and blood pressure (BP) beat-to-beat measures. The instantaneous baroreflex gain is estimated as the feedback branch of the loop with a point-process filter, while the RRBP feedforward transfer function representing heart contractility and vasculature effects is simultaneously estimated by a recursive least-squares filter. These two closed-loop gains provide a direct assessment of baroreflex control of heart rate (HR). In addition, the dynamic coherence, cross bispectrum, and their power ratio can also be estimated. All statistical indices provide a valuable quantitative assessment of the interaction between heartbeat dynamics and hemodynamics. To illustrate the application, we have applied the proposed point process model to experimental recordings from 11 healthy subjects in order to monitor cardiovascular regulation under propofol anesthesia. We present quantitative results during transient periods, as well as statistical analyses on steady-state epochs before and after propofol administration. Our findings validate the ability of the algorithm to provide a reliable and fast-tracking assessment of BRS, and show a clear overall reduction in baroreflex gain from the baseline period to the start of propofol anesthesia, confirming that instantaneous evaluation of arterial baroreflex control of HR may yield important implications in clinical practice, particularly during anesthesia and in postoperative care.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01-HL084502)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant K25-NS05758)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant DP2- OD006454)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant T32NS048005)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant T32NS048005)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01-DA015644)Massachusetts General Hospital (Clinical Research Center, UL1 Grant RR025758

    Use of Multiscale Entropy to Characterize Fetal Autonomic Development

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    The idea that uterine environment and adverse events during fetal development could increase the chances of the diseases in adulthood was first published by David Barker in 1998. Since then, investigators have been employing several methods and methodologies for studying and characterizing the ontological development of the fetus, e.g., fetal movement, growth and cardiac metrics. Even with most recent and developed methods such as fetal magnetocardiography (fMCG), investigators are continuously challenged to study fetal development; the fetus is inaccessible. Finding metrics that realize the full capacity of characterizing fetal ontological development remains a technological challenge. In this thesis, the use and value of multiscale entropy to characterize fetal maturation across third trimester of gestation is studied. Using multiscale entropy obtained from participants of a clinical trial, we show that MSE can characterize increasing complexity due to maturation in the fetus, and can distinguish a growing and developing fetal system from a mature system where loss of irregularity is due to compromised complexity from increasing physiologic load. MSE scales add a nonlinear metric that seems to accurately reflect the ontological development of the fetus and hold promise for future use to investigate the effects of maternal stress, intrauterine growth restriction, or predict risk for sudden infant death syndrome

    Nonlinear digital signal processing in mental health: characterization of major depression using instantaneous entropy measures of heartbeat dynamics

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    Nonlinear digital signal processing methods that address system complexity have provided useful computational tools for helping in the diagnosis and treatment of a wide range of pathologies. More specifically, nonlinear measures have been successful in characterizing patients with mental disorders such as Major Depression (MD). In this study, we propose the use of instantaneous measures of entropy, namely the inhomogeneous point-process approximate entropy (ipApEn) and the inhomogeneous point-process sample entropy (ipSampEn), to describe a novel characterization of MD patients undergoing affective elicitation. Because these measures are built within a nonlinear point-process model, they allow for the assessment of complexity in cardiovascular dynamics at each moment in time. Heartbeat dynamics were characterized from 48 healthy controls and 48 patients with MD while emotionally elicited through either neutral or arousing audiovisual stimuli. Experimental results coming from the arousing tasks show that ipApEn measures are able to instantaneously track heartbeat complexity as well as discern between healthy subjects and MD patients. Conversely, standard heart rate variability (HRV) analysis performed in both time and frequency domains did not show any statistical significance. We conclude that measures of entropy based on nonlinear point-process models might contribute to devising useful computational tools for care in mental health

    Complexity Variability Assessment of Nonlinear Time-Varying Cardiovascular Control

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    The application of complex systems theory to physiology and medicine has provided meaningful information about the nonlinear aspects underlying the dynamics of a wide range of biological processes and their disease-related aberrations. However, no studies have investigated whether meaningful information can be extracted by quantifying second-order moments of time-varying cardiovascular complexity. To this extent, we introduce a novel mathematical framework termed complexity variability, in which the variance of instantaneous Lyapunov spectra estimated over time serves as a reference quantifier. We apply the proposed methodology to four exemplary studies involving disorders which stem from cardiology, neurology and psychiatry: Congestive Heart Failure (CHF), Major Depression Disorder (MDD), Parkinson?s Disease (PD), and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) patients with insomnia under a yoga training regime. We show that complexity assessments derived from simple time-averaging are not able to discern pathology-related changes in autonomic control, and we demonstrate that between-group differences in measures of complexity variability are consistent across pathologies. Pathological states such as CHF, MDD, and PD are associated with an increased complexity variability when compared to healthy controls, whereas wellbeing derived from yoga in PTSD is associated with lower time-variance of complexity

    Characterizing cardiac autonomic dynamics of fear learning in humans

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    Understanding transient dynamics of the autonomic nervous system during fear learning remains a critical step to translate basic research into treatment of fear-related disorders. In humans, it has been demonstrated that fear learning typically elicits transient heart rate deceleration. However, classical analyses of heart rate variability (HRV) fail to disentangle the contribution of parasympathetic and sympathetic systems, and crucially, they are not able to capture phasic changes during fear learning. Here, to gain deeper insight into the physiological underpinnings of fear learning, a novel frequency-domain analysis of heart rate was performed using a short-time Fourier transform, and instantaneous spectral estimates extracted from a point-process modeling algorithm. We tested whether spectral transient components of HRV, used as a noninvasive probe of sympathetic and parasympathetic mechanisms, can dissociate between fear conditioned and neutral stimuli. We found that learned fear elicited a transient heart rate deceleration in anticipation of noxious stimuli. Crucially, results revealed a significant increase in spectral power in the high frequency band when facing the conditioned stimulus, indicating increased parasympathetic (vagal) activity, which distinguished conditioned and neutral stimuli during fear learning. Our findings provide a proximal measure of the involvement of cardiac vagal dynamics into the psychophysiology of fear learning and extinction, thus offering new insights for the characterization of fear in mental health and illness

    Estimation of instantaneous complex dynamics through Lyapunov exponents: a study on heartbeat dynamics

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    Measures of nonlinearity and complexity, and in particular the study of Lyapunov exponents, have been increasingly used to characterize dynamical properties of a wide range of biological nonlinear systems, including cardiovascular control. In this work, we present a novel methodology able to effectively estimate the Lyapunov spectrum of a series of stochastic events in an instantaneous fashion. The paradigm relies on a novel point-process high-order nonlinear model of the event series dynamics. The long-term information is taken into account by expanding the linear, quadratic, and cubic Wiener-Volterra kernels with the orthonormal Laguerre basis functions. Applications to synthetic data such as the H�non map and R�ssler attractor, as well as two experimental heartbeat interval datasets (i.e., healthy subjects undergoing postural changes and patients with severe cardiac heart failure), focus on estimation and tracking of the Instantaneous Dominant Lyapunov Exponent (IDLE). The novel cardiovascular assessment demonstrates that our method is able to effectively and instantaneously track the nonlinear autonomic control dynamics, allowing for complexity variability estimations

    Novel Framework for Nonlinear HRV Analysis and its Physiological Interpretation

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    La inclusión de métodos no lineales aplicados a señales de variabilidad del ritmo cardiaco (HRV, del inglés Heart Rate Variability) proporciona una nueva visión en la caracterización de anomalías en el contexto de las enfermedades cardiacas o patologías como la insuficiencia cardiaca o la fibrilación auricular, por nombrar algunas. Se ha demostrado que alteraciones en el sistema nervioso autónomo (ANS, del inglés Autonomic Nervous System), el cuál modula el ritmo cardiaco, conllevan a cambios en los patrones no lineales de la HRV. Sin embargo, la incertidumbre, todavía presente, en los mecanismos que subyacen a variaciones fisiológicas o patofisiológicas en los índices no lineales de la HRV, junto con el alto tiempo que requieren los algoritmos para la estimación de estos índices, representan el cuello de botella para su aplicación en la práctica clínica.Después de una breve introducción sobre los temas abordados en esta la tesis en el capítulo 1, el segundo capítulo, el capítulo 2, está dedicado a la primera gran contribución de esta tesis, que consiste en la propuesta y desarrollo de una metodología con el fin de reducir el coste computacional asociado a la caracterización no lineal de la HRV. El esquema propuesto es muy eficaz, reduciendo el tiempo de cálculo a unos pocos segundos para el análisis no lineal de señales de HRV de corta longitud (5 minutos). Con respecto a la interpretación del análisis no lineal de la HRV, es importante señalar que hay una serie de factores que afectan a su cálculo y deben tenerse en cuenta al comparar diferentes estudios de la literatura. Las características de las series de HRV, como la frecuencia de muestreo, así como la selección de valores de parámetros en los métodos no lineales, tienen un impacto en los resultados de los índices no lineales de la HRV y, en algunas circunstancias, pueden dar lugar a interpretaciones erróneas. Uno de los principales objetivos del capítulo 3 es estudiar la influencia de la tasa de muestreo en los índices no lineales de la HRV y proponer alternativas para atenuar esta influencia. Los métodos propuestos incluyen, por una parte, la corrección de la frecuencia cardiaca de las estimaciones de la HRV mediante fórmulas de regresión individuales o basadas en la población y, por otra, el preprocesamiento de las series temporales de HRV mediante modelos de interpolación o de point-process. El capítulo 4 se centra en investigar el efecto de la selección del valor de los parámetros requeridos para el cálculo de ciertos índices no lineales de la HRV (por ejemplo, la entropía aproximada) y proponiendo un nuevo índice independiente de la definición del valor de éstos parámetros a-priori. Este novedoso índice se denomina entropía multidimensional aproximada. El análisis no lineal de la HRV, incluido el nuevo índice propuesto, se aplica al estudio de afecciones asociadas a alteraciones de la modulación cardiaca del ANS, como el envejecimiento y la insuficiencia cardiaca congestiva (CHF, del inglés Congestive Heart Failure). Por un lado, todos los índices no lineales de la HRV evaluados ven disminuidos significativamente sus valores en las personas mayores en comparación con los jóvenes ambos grupos en condiciones de reposo en posición de decubito supino. Por otro lado, los pacientes con insuficiencia cardiaca muestran valores más altos de los índices no lineales significativamente con respecto al grupo de sujetos sanos, en ambos casos analizando el período nocturno. Además, el análisis no lineal de la HRV es evaluada en respuesta a provocaciones simpáticas, inducidas por el cambio de la posición supina a la posición de pie o por la administración de atropina, donde se observa una disminución en todos los índicesno lineales estimados.El capítulo 5 está dedicado a la evaluación del rendimiento del análisis no lineal de la HRV en el triaje de la administración profiláctica con el fin de prevenir los episodios de hipotension causados por la anestesia espinal durante el parto por cesárea. El estudio se realiza en colaboración con el Servicio de Anestesia del Hospital Universitario Miguel Servet (Zaragoza, España). Debido a que la profilaxis puede producir efectos secundarios en el feto, el desafío consiste en predecir los casos normotensos para los cuales se puede prescindir del tratamiento profilactico. La hipótesis de esta tesis se basa en el hecho de que la alteración de la regulación del ANS causada por el último período de embarazo y la proximidad a la cirugía podría reflejarse en los índices no lineales de la HRV, lo que podría ayudar a predecir los casos que deriven en hipotension y normotension con mayor precisión que cuando se utilizan solamente variables demográficas. Es importante destacar que las propuestas metodológicas para el análisis no lineal de la HRV desarrolladas en la tesis se aplican en la caracterización de otras señales cardiovasculares, como la señal fotopletismografica de pulso. Las series temporales derivadas de esta señal, que incluyen información del sistema vascular periférico, se incorporan en un clasificador basado en la regresión logística junto con los índices no lineales de la HRV. El clasificador propuesto alcanza un 76,5% de sensibilidad y un 72,2% de precisión en la detección de los casos normotensos, proporcionando así información pertinente y objetiva respaldando la decisión final del equipo médico.En el capítulo 6 se presentan las principales conclusiones derivadas de la tesis y se consideran futuras ampliaciones en base a las investigaciones llevadas a cabo. Se hace hincapié en la contribución de la tesis al desarrollo de metodologías novedosas para caracterizar de manera más robusta los índices no lineales de la HRV e interpretar con fiabilidad los resultados correspondientes. Basándose en las metodologías desarrolladas, se investigan las condiciones o patologías asociadas con alteraciones en la modulación autonómica de la actividad cardiaca y se destaca la contribución del análisis no lineal de la HRV para su caracterización. En conclusión, entre los objetivos metodológicos desarrollados en esta tesis se encuentran: i) la propuesta de un esquema de trabajo para incrementar la fiabilidad de la estimación de la dimensión de correlación, usando un algoritmo que reduce la carga computacional, facilitando su aplicabilidad en la práctica clínica; ii) el desarrollo de métodos alternativos para atenuar la dependencia de los índices no lineales de la HRV con el ritmo cardiaco medio; iii) la propuesta de un índice no lineal de la HRV multidimensional independiente de la definición a priori de parámetros para su estimación. Además, los objetivos relacionados con la aplicación clínica de lascontribuciones metodológicas son: i) la caracterización del efecto del envejecimiento en los índices no lineales de la HRV; ii) la evaluación de la complejidad e irregularidad del ritmo cardiaco en pacientes que sufren de insuficiencia cardiaca comparada con sujetos sanos; iii) la mejora de la eficacia de la profilaxis para la prevención de eventos de hipotensión después de anestesia espinal durante parto programado por cesárea.<br /

    Measures of sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic outflow from heartbeat dynamics

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    Reliable and effective noninvasive measures of sympathetic and parasympathetic peripheral outflow are of crucial importance in cardiovascular physiology. Although many techniques have been proposed to take up this long-lasting challenge, none has proposed a satisfying discrimination of the dynamics of the two separate branches. Spectral analysis of heart rate variability is the most currently used technique for such assessment. Despite its widespread use, it has been demonstrated that the subdivision in the low-frequency (LF) and high-frequency (HF) bands does not fully reflect separate influences of the sympathetic and parasympathetic branches, respectively, mainly due to their simultaneous action in the LF. Two novel heartbeat-derived autonomic measures, the sympathetic activity index (SAI) and parasympathetic activity index (PAI), are proposed to separately assess the time-varying autonomic nervous system synergic functions. Their efficacy is validated in landmark autonomic maneuvers generally employed in clinical settings. The novel measures move beyond the classical frequency domain paradigm through identification of a set of coefficients associated with a proper combination of Laguerre base functions. The resulting measures were compared with the traditional LF and HF power. A total of 236 ECG recordings were analyzed for validation, including autonomic outflow changes elicited by procedures of different nature and temporal variation, such as postural changes, lower body negative pressure, and handgrip tests. The proposed SAI-PAI measures consistently outperform traditional frequency-domain indexes in tracking expected instantaneous autonomic variations, both vagal and sympathetic, and may aid clinical decision making, showing reduced intersubject variability and physiologically plausible dynamics
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