96 research outputs found

    A Comprehensive Survey on Heart Sound Analysis in the Deep Learning Era

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    Heart sound auscultation has been demonstrated to be beneficial in clinical usage for early screening of cardiovascular diseases. Due to the high requirement of well-trained professionals for auscultation, automatic auscultation benefiting from signal processing and machine learning can help auxiliary diagnosis and reduce the burdens of training professional clinicians. Nevertheless, classic machine learning is limited to performance improvement in the era of big data. Deep learning has achieved better performance than classic machine learning in many research fields, as it employs more complex model architectures with stronger capability of extracting effective representations. Deep learning has been successfully applied to heart sound analysis in the past years. As most review works about heart sound analysis were given before 2017, the present survey is the first to work on a comprehensive overview to summarise papers on heart sound analysis with deep learning in the past six years 2017--2022. We introduce both classic machine learning and deep learning for comparison, and further offer insights about the advances and future research directions in deep learning for heart sound analysis

    Artificial intelligence and automation in valvular heart diseases

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    Artificial intelligence (AI) is gradually changing every aspect of social life, and healthcare is no exception. The clinical procedures that were supposed to, and could previously only be handled by human experts can now be carried out by machines in a more accurate and efficient way. The coming era of big data and the advent of supercomputers provides great opportunities to the development of AI technology for the enhancement of diagnosis and clinical decision-making. This review provides an introduction to AI and highlights its applications in the clinical flow of diagnosing and treating valvular heart diseases (VHDs). More specifically, this review first introduces some key concepts and subareas in AI. Secondly, it discusses the application of AI in heart sound auscultation and medical image analysis for assistance in diagnosing VHDs. Thirdly, it introduces using AI algorithms to identify risk factors and predict mortality of cardiac surgery. This review also describes the state-of-the-art autonomous surgical robots and their roles in cardiac surgery and intervention

    Phonocardiographic sensing using deep learning for abnormal heartbeat detection

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    Deep learning-based cardiac auscultation is of significant interest to the healthcare community as it can help reducing the burden of manual auscultation with automated detection of abnormal heartbeats. However, the problem of automatic cardiac auscultation is complicated due to the requirement of reliable and highly accurate systems, which are robust to the background noise in the heartbeat sound. In this paper, we propose a Recurrent Neural Networks (RNNs)-based automated cardiac auscultation solution. Our choice of RNNs is motivated by their great success of modeling sequential or temporal data even in the presence of noise. We explore the use of various RNN models, and demonstrate that these models significantly outperform the best reported results in the literature. We also present the run-time complexity of various RNNs, which provides insight about their complexity versus performance trade-offs

    Deteção de patologia cardíaca usando machine learning

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    Segundo a Organização Mundial da Saúde, as doenças cardiovasculares (DCV) representam 32% do número de mortes no mundo. A redução deste valor pode ser atingida através da deteção precoce que pode levar a um tratamento mais preciso, melhorando a expectativa de vida do paciente. A ausculta cardíaca é a principal técnica utilizada pelos profissionais de saúde para identificar muitas DCV. No entanto, a auscultação dos sons cardíacos é um procedimento difícil, já que muitos sons são fracos e difíceis de detetar, sendo necessário um processo de treino contínuo. Os estetoscópios modernos podem amplificar os sons cardíacos, reduzir o ruído de ambiente, melhorar a percepção do usuário e, mais importante, converter um sinal acústico em digital. Isto permitiu o desenvolvimento de sistemas de decisão assistidos por computador baseados na auscultação. Este documento apresenta uma metodologia que pode detectar automaticamente a existência de DCV através de sons cardíacos obtidos de diferentes partes do coração. Diversas tecnologias foram analisadas, assim como projetos que tentam resolver parte do problema em questão e a partir deles, três alternativas diferentes foram elaboradas e documentadas, assim como a divisão do dataset e métricas a serem usadas nos testes. Essas alternativas visam classificar anomalias na auscultação cardíaca dos pacientes. Vários modelos das duas primeiras alternativas foram implementados e seus resultados apresentados. Também é feita uma comparação entre as experiências desenvolvidas entre si, também com experiências básicas que não utilizam mecanismos inteligentes e com outros trabalhos que tenham o mesmo objetivo. O melhor resultado obtido foi pela primeira abordagem com uma exatidão de 94%, precisão de 81% e recall de 67%.According to World Health Organization, the cardiovascular diseases (CVD) represent 32% of the number of deaths worldwide. Early detection leads to a more accurate treatment plan and improves the patient’s life expectancy. Cardiac auscultation is the main technique used by health professionals to identify many CVD. Nevertheless, heart sound auscultation is a difficult procedure, since it requires continuous training and many heart sounds are faint and hard to detect. However, modern stethoscopes can amplify heart sounds, reduce the environment noise, improve the user’s perception and, more importantly, convert an acoustic signal to a digital one. This allowed, the development of computer assisted decision systems based on auscultation. This document presents a methodology that can automatically detect the existence of CVD through cardiac sounds obtained from different parts of the heart. Several technologies were analysed, as well as projects that try to solve part of the problem in question and from them, three different alternatives were elaborated and documented, as well as the division of test data and the metrics for their evaluation. These alternatives are intended to classify anomalies in patients' cardiac auscultation. Several models of the first two alternatives were implemented and their results presented. A comparison is also made between the experiences developed among themselves, also with basic experiments that do not use intelligent mechanisms and with other works that have the same objective. The best result obtained was by the first approach with an accuracy of 94%, precision of 81% and recall of 67%
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