289 research outputs found

    Rf sensing and processing methods for noninvasive health monitoring

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    Vulnerable populations include groups of people with a higher risk of poor health as a result of the limitations due to illness or disability. The health issues of vulnerable populations include three categories: physical, psychological, and social. The people with physical issues include high-risk mothers and infants, older adults and others with chronic illnesses and people with disabilities. The psychological issues of vulnerable populations include chronic mental conditions, such as bipolar disorder, major depression, and hyperactivity disorder, as well as substance abuse and those who are suicidal. The social issues in vulnerable populations include those living in abusive families, the homeless, etc. This dissertation concentrates on methods for helping two groups of vulnerable populations, namely, frail older adults and psychiatric hospital patients, to monitor their activity level, respiration rate, sleeping quality, and restless time in bed. In the first part of our work, we investigate a contactless monitoring system for psychiatric patients in a naturalistic hospital setting that can track their motion in bed, estimate the breathing rate of patients during their peaceful sleeping periods, and can be used to estimate a patient's restless time and sleep quality. Specifically, the contactless monitoring system uses a Vayyar Radar system with a carrier frequency of 6.014 GHz to capture all reflections by the FMCW (frequency modulation continuous waveform) signal. The Vayyar Radar system has been installed in a Psychiatric Center to capture 12 nights with over 135 hours of data from 7 patients. A depth camera and a thermal camera have also been installed and are used as the ground truth. The goal is to classify in bed and out of bed classes, quantify restlessness in bed, and determine the breathing rate while patients are lying in bed. We have simulated the psychiatric hospital set-up in the lab, where a respiration belt is used for ground truth, and tested the system with body postures of patients observed in the psychiatric hospital. We estimated respiration rate with different sleep postures, with the aim of investigating a contactless monitoring system for psychiatric patients in the hospital that can estimate the breathing rate of patients during typical sleeping postures, and find the torso area when the patients use other postures, such as reading books in bed or reversing the body on the bed. In the second part of our work, we investigate two methods for learning the room structure via radio wave reflections for longitudinal health monitoring of older adults in a naturalistic home setting. The goal is to use these data as part of a monitoring system that can be easily installed in a home with minimal configuration, for the purpose of detecting very early signs of illness and functional decline. Two studies are conducted using RF (radio frequency) sensing. The first method learns the structure from the RF clutter patterns and uses the beat frequency of the maximum peak in each chirp to calculate the wall position. The second method learns the room structure from active movement patterns and uses the open space between the clusters of active movement patterns to estimate the possible wall locations. Comparing the two results from these methods provides a more robust wall location. In addition, a background filter is designed based on the wall position, and the activity level of people in different rooms is estimated using a fuzzy rule system applied to the RF motion data

    Non-Imaging Acoustical Properties in Monitoring Arteriovenous Hemodialysis Access. a Review

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    The limitations of the gold standard angiography technique in arteriovenous access surveillance have opened a gap for researchers to find the best way to monitor this condition with low-cost, non-invasive and continuous bedside monitoring. The phonoangiography technique has been developed prior to these limits. This measurement and monitoring technique, associated with intelligence signal processing, promises better analysis for early detection of hemodialysis access problems, such as stenosis and thrombosis. Some research groups have shown that the phonoangiography technique could identify as many as 20% of vascular diameter changes and also its frequency characteristics due to hemodialysis access problems. The frequency characteristics of these acoustical signals are presented and discussed in detail to understand the association with the stenosis level, blood flows, sensor locations, fundamental frequency bands of normal and abnormal conditions, and also the spectral energy produced. This promising technique could be used in the near future as a tool for pre-diagnosis of arteriovenous access before any further access correction by surgical techniques is required. This paper provides an extensive review of various arteriovenous access monitoring techniques based on non-imaging acoustical properties

    Sensors for Vital Signs Monitoring

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    Sensor technology for monitoring vital signs is an important topic for various service applications, such as entertainment and personalization platforms and Internet of Things (IoT) systems, as well as traditional medical purposes, such as disease indication judgments and predictions. Vital signs for monitoring include respiration and heart rates, body temperature, blood pressure, oxygen saturation, electrocardiogram, blood glucose concentration, brain waves, etc. Gait and walking length can also be regarded as vital signs because they can indirectly indicate human activity and status. Sensing technologies include contact sensors such as electrocardiogram (ECG), electroencephalogram (EEG), photoplethysmogram (PPG), non-contact sensors such as ballistocardiography (BCG), and invasive/non-invasive sensors for diagnoses of variations in blood characteristics or body fluids. Radar, vision, and infrared sensors can also be useful technologies for detecting vital signs from the movement of humans or organs. Signal processing, extraction, and analysis techniques are important in industrial applications along with hardware implementation techniques. Battery management and wireless power transmission technologies, the design and optimization of low-power circuits, and systems for continuous monitoring and data collection/transmission should also be considered with sensor technologies. In addition, machine-learning-based diagnostic technology can be used for extracting meaningful information from continuous monitoring data

    A Review of Physical Human Activity Recognition Chain Using Sensors

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    In the era of Internet of Medical Things (IoMT), healthcare monitoring has gained a vital role nowadays. Moreover, improving lifestyle, encouraging healthy behaviours, and decreasing the chronic diseases are urgently required. However, tracking and monitoring critical cases/conditions of elderly and patients is a great challenge. Healthcare services for those people are crucial in order to achieve high safety consideration. Physical human activity recognition using wearable devices is used to monitor and recognize human activities for elderly and patient. The main aim of this review study is to highlight the human activity recognition chain, which includes, sensing technologies, preprocessing and segmentation, feature extractions methods, and classification techniques. Challenges and future trends are also highlighted.

    Recent Advances in Signal Processing

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    The signal processing task is a very critical issue in the majority of new technological inventions and challenges in a variety of applications in both science and engineering fields. Classical signal processing techniques have largely worked with mathematical models that are linear, local, stationary, and Gaussian. They have always favored closed-form tractability over real-world accuracy. These constraints were imposed by the lack of powerful computing tools. During the last few decades, signal processing theories, developments, and applications have matured rapidly and now include tools from many areas of mathematics, computer science, physics, and engineering. This book is targeted primarily toward both students and researchers who want to be exposed to a wide variety of signal processing techniques and algorithms. It includes 27 chapters that can be categorized into five different areas depending on the application at hand. These five categories are ordered to address image processing, speech processing, communication systems, time-series analysis, and educational packages respectively. The book has the advantage of providing a collection of applications that are completely independent and self-contained; thus, the interested reader can choose any chapter and skip to another without losing continuity

    Novel Processing and Transmission Techniques Leveraging Edge Computing for Smart Health Systems

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    L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen

    New Image Processing Methods for Ultrasound Musculoskeletal Applications

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    In the past few years, ultrasound (US) imaging modalities have received increasing interest as diagnostic tools for orthopedic applications. The goal for many of these novel ultrasonic methods is to be able to create three-dimensional (3D) bone visualization non-invasively, safely and with high accuracy and spatial resolution. Availability of accurate bone segmentation and 3D reconstruction methods would help correctly interpreting complex bone morphology as well as facilitate quantitative analysis. However, in vivo ultrasound images of bones may have poor quality due to uncontrollable motion, high ultrasonic attenuation and the presence of imaging artifacts, which can affect the quality of the bone segmentation and reconstruction results. In this study, we investigate the use of novel ultrasonic processing methods that can significantly improve bone visualization, segmentation and 3D reconstruction in ultrasound volumetric data acquired in applications in vivo. Specifically, in this study, we investigate the use of new elastography-based, Doppler-based and statistical shape model-based methods that can be applied to ultrasound bone imaging applications with the overall major goal of obtaining fast yet accurate 3D bone reconstructions. This study is composed to three projects, which all have the potential to significantly contribute to this major goal. The first project deals with the fast and accurate implementation of correlation-based elastography and poroelastography techniques for real-time assessment of the mechanical properties of musculoskeletal tissues. The rationale behind this project is that, iii in the future, elastography-based features can be used to reduce false positives in ultrasonic bone segmentation methods based on the differences between the mechanical properties of soft tissues and the mechanical properties of hard tissues. In this study, a hybrid computation model is designed, implemented and tested to achieve real time performance without compromise in elastographic image quality . In the second project, a Power Doppler-based signal enhancement method is designed and tested with the intent of increasing the contrast between soft tissue and bone while suppressing the contrast between soft tissue and connective tissue, which is often a cause of false positives in ultrasonic bone segmentation problems. Both in-vitro and in-vivo experiments are performed to statistically analyze the performance of this method. In the third project, a statistical shape model based bone surface segmentation method is proposed and investigated. This method uses statistical models to determine if a curve detected in a segmented ultrasound image belongs to a bone surface or not. Both in-vitro and in-vivo experiments are performed to statistically analyze the performance of this method. I conclude this Dissertation with a discussion on possible future work in the field of ultrasound bone imaging and assessment

    Characterization, Classification, and Genesis of Seismocardiographic Signals

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    Seismocardiographic (SCG) signals are the acoustic and vibration induced by cardiac activity measured non-invasively at the chest surface. These signals may offer a method for diagnosing and monitoring heart function. Successful classification of SCG signals in health and disease depends on accurate signal characterization and feature extraction. In this study, SCG signal features were extracted in the time, frequency, and time-frequency domains. Different methods for estimating time-frequency features of SCG were investigated. Results suggested that the polynomial chirplet transform outperformed wavelet and short time Fourier transforms. Many factors may contribute to increasing intrasubject SCG variability including subject posture and respiratory phase. In this study, the effect of respiration on SCG signal variability was investigated. Results suggested that SCG waveforms can vary with lung volume, respiratory flow direction, or a combination of these criteria. SCG events were classified into groups belonging to these different respiration phases using classifiers, including artificial neural networks, support vector machines, and random forest. Categorizing SCG events into different groups containing similar events allows more accurate estimation of SCG features. SCG feature points were also identified from simultaneous measurements of SCG and other well-known physiologic signals including electrocardiography, phonocardiography, and echocardiography. Future work may use this information to get more insights into the genesis of SCG

    Advanced bioimpedance signal processing techniques for hemodynamic monitoring during anesthesia

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    Aplicat embargament des de la data de defensa fins els maig 2020.Cardiac output (CO) defines the blood flow arriving from the heart to the different organs in the body and it is thus a primary determinant of global 02 transport. Cardiac output has traditionally been measured using invasive methods, whose risk sometimes exceeds the advantages of a cardiac output monitoring. In this context, the minimization of risk in new noninvasive technologies for CO monitoring could translate into major advantages for clinicians, hospitals and patients: ease of usage and availability, reduced recovery time, and improved patient outcome. Impedance Cardiography (ICG) is a promising noninvasive technology for cardiac output monitoring but available information on the ICG signals is more scare than other physiological signals such as the electrocardiogram (ECG). The present Doctoral Thesis contributes to the development of signal treatment techniques for the ICG in order to create an innovative hemodynamic monitor. First, an extensive literature review is provided regarding the basics of the clinical background in which cardiac output monitoring is used and concerning the state of the art of cardiac output monitors on the market. This Doctoral Thesis has produced a considerable amount of clinical data which is also explained in detail. These clinical data are also useful to complement the theoretical explanation of patient indices such as heart rate variability, blood flow and blood pressure. In addition, a new method to create synthetic biomedical signals with known time-frequency characteristics is introduced. One of the first analysis in this Doctoral Thesis studies the time difference between peak points of the heart beats in the ECG and the ICG: the RC segment. This RC segment is a measure of the time delay between electrical and mechanical activity of the heart. The relationship of the RC segment with blood pressure and heart interval is analyzed. The concordance of beat durations of both the electrocardiogram and the impedance cardiogram is one of the key results to develop new artefact detection algorithms and the RC could also have an impact in describing the hemodynamics of a patient. Time-frequency distributions (TFDs) are also used to characterize how the frequency content in impedance cardiography signals change with time. Since TFDs are calculated using concrete kernels, a new method to select the best kernel by using synthetic signals is presented. Optimized TFDs of ICG signals are then calculated to extract severa! features which are used to discriminate between different anesthesia states in patients undergoing surgery. TFD-derived features are also used to describe the whole surgical operations. Relationships between TFD-derived features are analyzed and prediction models for cardiac output are designed. These prediction models prove that the TFD-derived features are related to the patients' cardiac output. Finally, a validation study for the qCO monitor is presented. The qCO monitor has been designed using sorne of the techniques which are consequence of this Doctoral Thesis. The main outputs of this work have been protected with a patent which has already been filed. As a conclusion, this Doctoral Thesis has produced a considerable amount of clinical data and a variety of analysis and processing techniques of impedance cardiography signals which have been included into commercial medical devices already available on the market.El gasto cardíaco (GC) define el flujo de sangre que llega desde el corazón a los distintos órganos del cuerpo y es, por tanto, un determinante primario del transporte global de oxígeno. Se ha medido tradicionalmente usando métodos invasivos cuyos riesgos excedían en ocasiones las ventajas de su monitorización. En este contexto, la minimización del riesgo de la monitorización del gasto cardíaco en nuevas tecnologías no invasivas podría traducirse en mayores ventajas para médicos, hospitales y pacientes: facilidad de uso, disponibilidad del equipamiento y menor tiempo de recuperación y mejores resultados en el paciente. La impedancio-cardiografía o cardiografía de impedancia (ICG} es una prometedora tecnología no invasiva para la monitorización del gasto cardíaco. Sin embargo, la información disponible sobre las señales de ICG es más escasa que otras señales fisiológicas como el electrocardiograma (ECG). La presente Tesis Doctoral contribuye al desarrollo de técnicas de tratamiento de señal de ICG para así crear un monitor hemodinámico innovador. En primer lugar, se proporciona una extensa revisión bibliográfica sobre los aspectos básicos del contexto clínico en el que se utiliza la monitorización del gasto cardíaco así como sobre el estado del arte de los monitores de gasto cardíaco que existen en el mercado. Esta Tesis Doctoral ha producido una considerable cantidad de datos clínicos que también se explican en detalle. Dichos datos clínicos también son útiles para complementar las explicaciones teóricas de los índices de paciente de variabilidad cardíaca y el flujo y la presión sanguíneos. Además, se presenta un nuevo método de creación de señales sintéticas biomédicas con características de tiempo-frecuencia conocidas. Uno de los primeros análisis de esta Tesis Doctoral estudia la diferencia temporal entre los picos de los latidos cardíacos del ECG y del ICG: el segmento RC. Este segmento RC es una medida del retardo temporal entre la actividad eléctrica y mecánica del corazón. Se analiza la relación del segmento RC con la presión arterial y el intervalo cardíaco. La concordancia entre la duración de los latidos del ECG y del ICG es uno de los resultados claves para desarrollar nuevos algoritmos de detección de artefactos y el segmento RC también podría ser relevante en la descripción de la hemodinámica de los pacientes. Las distribuciones de tiempo-frecuencia (TFD, por sus siglas en inglés) se utilizan para caracterizar cómo el contenido de las señales de impedancia cardiográfica cambia con el tiempo. Dado que las TFDs deben calcularse usando núcleos (kernels, en inglés) concretos, se presenta un nuevo método para seleccionar el mejor núcleo mediante el uso de señales sintéticas. Las TFDs de ICG optimizadas se calculan para extraer distintas características que son usadas para discriminar entre los diferentes estados de anestesia en pacientes sometidos a procesos quirúrgicos. Las características derivadas de las distribuciones de tiempo-frecuencia también son utilizadas para describir las operaciones quirúrgicas durante toda su extensión temporal. La relación entre dichas características son analizadas y se proponen distintos modelos de predicción para el gasto cardíaco. Estos modelos de predicción demuestran que las características derivadas de las distribuciones tiempo-frecuencia de señales de ICG están relacionadas con el gasto cardíaco de los pacientes. Finalmente, se presenta un estudio de validación del monitor qCO, diseñado con alguna de las técnicas que son consecuencia de esta Tesis Doctoral. Las principales conclusiones de este trabajo han sido protegidas con una patente que ya ha sido registrada. Como conclusión, esta Tesis Doctoral ha producido una considerable cantidad de datos clínicos y una variedad de técnicas de procesado y análisis de señales de cardiografía de impedancia que han sido incluidas en dispositivos biomédicos disponibles en el mercadoPostprint (published version

    Advanced bioimpedance signal processing techniques for hemodynamic monitoring during anesthesia

    Get PDF
    Cardiac output (CO) defines the blood flow arriving from the heart to the different organs in the body and it is thus a primary determinant of global 02 transport. Cardiac output has traditionally been measured using invasive methods, whose risk sometimes exceeds the advantages of a cardiac output monitoring. In this context, the minimization of risk in new noninvasive technologies for CO monitoring could translate into major advantages for clinicians, hospitals and patients: ease of usage and availability, reduced recovery time, and improved patient outcome. Impedance Cardiography (ICG) is a promising noninvasive technology for cardiac output monitoring but available information on the ICG signals is more scare than other physiological signals such as the electrocardiogram (ECG). The present Doctoral Thesis contributes to the development of signal treatment techniques for the ICG in order to create an innovative hemodynamic monitor. First, an extensive literature review is provided regarding the basics of the clinical background in which cardiac output monitoring is used and concerning the state of the art of cardiac output monitors on the market. This Doctoral Thesis has produced a considerable amount of clinical data which is also explained in detail. These clinical data are also useful to complement the theoretical explanation of patient indices such as heart rate variability, blood flow and blood pressure. In addition, a new method to create synthetic biomedical signals with known time-frequency characteristics is introduced. One of the first analysis in this Doctoral Thesis studies the time difference between peak points of the heart beats in the ECG and the ICG: the RC segment. This RC segment is a measure of the time delay between electrical and mechanical activity of the heart. The relationship of the RC segment with blood pressure and heart interval is analyzed. The concordance of beat durations of both the electrocardiogram and the impedance cardiogram is one of the key results to develop new artefact detection algorithms and the RC could also have an impact in describing the hemodynamics of a patient. Time-frequency distributions (TFDs) are also used to characterize how the frequency content in impedance cardiography signals change with time. Since TFDs are calculated using concrete kernels, a new method to select the best kernel by using synthetic signals is presented. Optimized TFDs of ICG signals are then calculated to extract severa! features which are used to discriminate between different anesthesia states in patients undergoing surgery. TFD-derived features are also used to describe the whole surgical operations. Relationships between TFD-derived features are analyzed and prediction models for cardiac output are designed. These prediction models prove that the TFD-derived features are related to the patients' cardiac output. Finally, a validation study for the qCO monitor is presented. The qCO monitor has been designed using sorne of the techniques which are consequence of this Doctoral Thesis. The main outputs of this work have been protected with a patent which has already been filed. As a conclusion, this Doctoral Thesis has produced a considerable amount of clinical data and a variety of analysis and processing techniques of impedance cardiography signals which have been included into commercial medical devices already available on the market.El gasto cardíaco (GC) define el flujo de sangre que llega desde el corazón a los distintos órganos del cuerpo y es, por tanto, un determinante primario del transporte global de oxígeno. Se ha medido tradicionalmente usando métodos invasivos cuyos riesgos excedían en ocasiones las ventajas de su monitorización. En este contexto, la minimización del riesgo de la monitorización del gasto cardíaco en nuevas tecnologías no invasivas podría traducirse en mayores ventajas para médicos, hospitales y pacientes: facilidad de uso, disponibilidad del equipamiento y menor tiempo de recuperación y mejores resultados en el paciente. La impedancio-cardiografía o cardiografía de impedancia (ICG} es una prometedora tecnología no invasiva para la monitorización del gasto cardíaco. Sin embargo, la información disponible sobre las señales de ICG es más escasa que otras señales fisiológicas como el electrocardiograma (ECG). La presente Tesis Doctoral contribuye al desarrollo de técnicas de tratamiento de señal de ICG para así crear un monitor hemodinámico innovador. En primer lugar, se proporciona una extensa revisión bibliográfica sobre los aspectos básicos del contexto clínico en el que se utiliza la monitorización del gasto cardíaco así como sobre el estado del arte de los monitores de gasto cardíaco que existen en el mercado. Esta Tesis Doctoral ha producido una considerable cantidad de datos clínicos que también se explican en detalle. Dichos datos clínicos también son útiles para complementar las explicaciones teóricas de los índices de paciente de variabilidad cardíaca y el flujo y la presión sanguíneos. Además, se presenta un nuevo método de creación de señales sintéticas biomédicas con características de tiempo-frecuencia conocidas. Uno de los primeros análisis de esta Tesis Doctoral estudia la diferencia temporal entre los picos de los latidos cardíacos del ECG y del ICG: el segmento RC. Este segmento RC es una medida del retardo temporal entre la actividad eléctrica y mecánica del corazón. Se analiza la relación del segmento RC con la presión arterial y el intervalo cardíaco. La concordancia entre la duración de los latidos del ECG y del ICG es uno de los resultados claves para desarrollar nuevos algoritmos de detección de artefactos y el segmento RC también podría ser relevante en la descripción de la hemodinámica de los pacientes. Las distribuciones de tiempo-frecuencia (TFD, por sus siglas en inglés) se utilizan para caracterizar cómo el contenido de las señales de impedancia cardiográfica cambia con el tiempo. Dado que las TFDs deben calcularse usando núcleos (kernels, en inglés) concretos, se presenta un nuevo método para seleccionar el mejor núcleo mediante el uso de señales sintéticas. Las TFDs de ICG optimizadas se calculan para extraer distintas características que son usadas para discriminar entre los diferentes estados de anestesia en pacientes sometidos a procesos quirúrgicos. Las características derivadas de las distribuciones de tiempo-frecuencia también son utilizadas para describir las operaciones quirúrgicas durante toda su extensión temporal. La relación entre dichas características son analizadas y se proponen distintos modelos de predicción para el gasto cardíaco. Estos modelos de predicción demuestran que las características derivadas de las distribuciones tiempo-frecuencia de señales de ICG están relacionadas con el gasto cardíaco de los pacientes. Finalmente, se presenta un estudio de validación del monitor qCO, diseñado con alguna de las técnicas que son consecuencia de esta Tesis Doctoral. Las principales conclusiones de este trabajo han sido protegidas con una patente que ya ha sido registrada. Como conclusión, esta Tesis Doctoral ha producido una considerable cantidad de datos clínicos y una variedad de técnicas de procesado y análisis de señales de cardiografía de impedancia que han sido incluidas en dispositivos biomédicos disponibles en el mercad
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