899 research outputs found

    Oximetry use in obstructive sleep apnea

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    Producción CientíficaIntroduction. Overnight oximetry has been proposed as an accessible, simple, and reliable technique for obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) diagnosis. From visual inspection to advanced signal processing, several studies have demonstrated the usefulness of oximetry as a screening tool. However, there is still controversy regarding the general application of oximetry as a single screening methodology for OSAS. Areas covered. Currently, high-resolution portable devices combined with pattern recognition-based applications are able to achieve high performance in the detection this disease. In this review, recent studies involving automated analysis of oximetry by means of advanced signal processing and machine learning algorithms are analyzed. Advantages and limitations are highlighted and novel research lines aimed at improving the screening ability of oximetry are proposed. Expert commentary. Oximetry is a cost-effective tool for OSAS screening in patients showing high pretest probability for the disease. Nevertheless, exhaustive analyses are still needed to further assess unattended oximetry monitoring as a single diagnostic test for sleep apnea, particularly in the pediatric population and in especial groups with significant comorbidities. In the following years, communication technologies and big data analysis will overcome current limitations of simplified sleep testing approaches, changing the detection and management of OSAS.This research has been partially supported by the projects DPI2017-84280-R and RTC-2015-3446-1 from Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad and European Regional Development Fund (FEDER), the project 66/2016 of the Sociedad Española de Neumología y Cirugía Torácica (SEPAR), and the project VA037U16 from the Consejería de Educación de la Junta de Castilla y León and FEDER. D. Álvarez was in receipt of a Juan de la Cierva grant IJCI-2014-22664 from the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad

    A review of ECG-based diagnosis support systems for obstructive sleep apnea

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    Humans need sleep. It is important for physical and psychological recreation. During sleep our consciousness is suspended or least altered. Hence, our ability to avoid or react to disturbances is reduced. These disturbances can come from external sources or from disorders within the body. Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is such a disorder. It is caused by obstruction of the upper airways which causes periods where the breathing ceases. In many cases, periods of reduced breathing, known as hypopnea, precede OSA events. The medical background of OSA is well understood, but the traditional diagnosis is expensive, as it requires sophisticated measurements and human interpretation of potentially large amounts of physiological data. Electrocardiogram (ECG) measurements have the potential to reduce the cost of OSA diagnosis by simplifying the measurement process. On the down side, detecting OSA events based on ECG data is a complex task which requires highly skilled practitioners. Computer algorithms can help to detect the subtle signal changes which indicate the presence of a disorder. That approach has the following advantages: computers never tire, processing resources are economical and progress, in the form of better algorithms, can be easily disseminated as updates over the internet. Furthermore, Computer-Aided Diagnosis (CAD) reduces intra- and inter-observer variability. In this review, we adopt and support the position that computer based ECG signal interpretation is able to diagnose OSA with a high degree of accuracy

    Machine learning approaches for predicting sleep arousal response based on heart rate variability, oxygen saturation, and body profiles.

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    OBJECTIVE: Obstructive sleep apnea is a global health concern, and several tools have been developed to screen its severity. However, most tools focus on respiratory events instead of sleep arousal, which can also affect sleep efficiency. This study employed easy-to-measure parameters-namely heart rate variability, oxygen saturation, and body profiles-to predict arousal occurrence. METHODS: Body profiles and polysomnography recordings were collected from 659 patients. Continuous heart rate variability and oximetry measurements were performed and then labeled based on the presence of sleep arousal. The dataset, comprising five body profiles, mean heart rate, six heart rate variability, and five oximetry variables, was then split into 80% training/validation and 20% testing datasets. Eight machine learning approaches were employed. The model with the highest accuracy, area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, and area under the precision recall curve values in the training/validation dataset was applied to the testing dataset and to determine feature importance. RESULTS: InceptionTime, which exhibited superior performance in predicting sleep arousal in the training dataset, was used to classify the testing dataset and explore feature importance. In the testing dataset, InceptionTime achieved an accuracy of 76.21%, an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 84.33%, and an area under the precision recall curve of 86.28%. The standard deviations of time intervals between successive normal heartbeats and the square roots of the means of the squares of successive differences between normal heartbeats were predominant predictors of arousal occurrence. CONCLUSIONS: The established models can be considered for screening sleep arousal occurrence or integrated in wearable devices for home-based sleep examination

    On the Generalization of Sleep Apnea Detection Methods Based on Heart Rate Variability and Machine Learning

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    [EN] Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a respiratory disorder highly correlated with severe cardiovascular diseases that has unleashed the interest of hundreds of experts aiming to overcome the elevated requirements of polysomnography, the gold standard for its detection. In this regard, a variety of algorithms based on heart rate variability (HRV) features and machine learning (ML) classifiers have been recently proposed for epoch-wise OSA detection from the surface electrocardiogram signal. Many researchers have employed freely available databases to assess their methods in a reproducible way, but most were purely tested with cross-validation approaches and even some using solely a single database for training and testing procedures. Hence, although promising values of diagnostic accuracy have been reported by some of these methods, they are suspected to be overestimated and the present work aims to analyze the actual generalization ability of several epoch-wise OSA detectors obtained through a common ML pipeline and typical HRV features. Precisely, the performance of the generated OSA detectors has been compared on two validation approaches, i.e., the widely used epoch-wise, k-fold cross-validation and the highly recommended external validation, both considering different combinations of well-known public databases. Regardless of the used ML classifiers and the selected HRV-based features, the external validation results have been 20 to 40% lower than those obtained with cross-validation in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity. Consequently, these results suggest that ML-based OSA detectors trained with public databases are still not sufficiently general to be employed in clinical practice, as well as that larger, more representative public datasets and the use of external validation are mandatory to improve the generalization ability and to obtain reliable assessment of the true predictive power of these algorithms, respectively.This research has received financial support from public grants PID2021-00X128525-IV0 and PID2021-123804OB-I00 of the Spanish Government 10.13039/501100011033 jointly with the European Regional Development Fund, SBPLY/17/180501/000411 and SBPLY/21/180501/000186 from Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha, and AICO/2021/286 from Generalitat Valenciana. Moreover, Daniele Padovano holds a predoctoral scholarship 2022-PRED-20642, which is cofinanced by the operating program of European Social Fund (ESF) 2014-2020 of Castilla-La Mancha.Padovano, D.; Martínez-Rodrigo, A.; Pastor, JM.; Rieta, JJ.; Alcaraz, R. (2022). On the Generalization of Sleep Apnea Detection Methods Based on Heart Rate Variability and Machine Learning. IEEE Access. 10:92710-92725. https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2022.320191192710927251

    Obstructive Sleep Apnea Detection Methods Based on Heart Rate Variability Analysis: Opportunities for a Future Cinc Challenge

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    [EN] The effects of sleep-related disorders, such as obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), can be devastating either in children or adults. Misdiagnosis may lead to severe cardiovascular diseases. Besides, OSA consequences are often related to bad job performance, and road accidents. Nowadays, polysomnography (PSG) is still considered the gold standard for OSA diagnosis, but the required facilities are extremely high, thus reducing availability worldwide. For this reason, simpler and cost-effective diagnosing methods have been proposed in the late years. In this regard, the heart rate variability (HRV) has been demonstrated to strongly reflect apnea episodes during sleep. Hence, this work reviews the latest advances in the evaluation of OSA from the HRV perspective to consider its potentialities for a future revisited CinC Challenge.This research has been supported by grants DPI201783952-C3 from MINECO/AEI/FEDER EU, SBPLY/17/180501/000411 from Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-la Mancha and AICO/2019/036 from Generalitat Valenciana. Moreover, Daniele Padovano has held graduate research scholarships from Escuela Polit ' ecnica de Cuenca and Instituto de Tecnolog ' ias Audiovisuales, University of CastillaLa ManchaPadovano, D.; Martinez-Rodrigo, A.; Pastor, JM.; Rieta, JJ.; Alcaraz, R. (2020). Obstructive Sleep Apnea Detection Methods Based on Heart Rate Variability Analysis: Opportunities for a Future Cinc Challenge. IEEE. 1-4. https://doi.org/10.22489/CinC.2020.400S1

    Usefulness of Artificial Neural Networks in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Sleep Apnea-Hypopnea Syndrome

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    Sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) is a chronic and highly prevalent disease considered a major health problem in industrialized countries. The gold standard diagnostic methodology is in-laboratory nocturnal polysomnography (PSG), which is complex, costly, and time consuming. In order to overcome these limitations, novel and simplified diagnostic alternatives are demanded. Sleep scientists carried out an exhaustive research during the last decades focused on the design of automated expert systems derived from artificial intelligence able to help sleep specialists in their daily practice. Among automated pattern recognition techniques, artificial neural networks (ANNs) have demonstrated to be efficient and accurate algorithms in order to implement computer-aided diagnosis systems aimed at assisting physicians in the management of SAHS. In this regard, several applications of ANNs have been developed, such as classification of patients suspected of suffering from SAHS, apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) prediction, detection and quantification of respiratory events, apneic events classification, automated sleep staging and arousal detection, alertness monitoring systems, and airflow pressure optimization in positive airway pressure (PAP) devices to fit patients’ needs. In the present research, current applications of ANNs in the framework of SAHS management are thoroughly reviewed

    Detection of Obstructive Sleep Apnea from ECG Signal using SVM based Grid Search

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    Obstructive Sleep Apnea is one common form of sleep apnea and is now tested by means of a process called Polysomnography which is time-consuming, expensive and also requires a human observer throughout the study of the subject which makes it inconvenient and new detection techniques are now being developed to overcome these difficulties. Heart rate variability has proven to be related to sleep apnea episodes and thus the features from the ECG signal can be used in the detection of sleep apnea. The proposed detection technique uses Support Vector Machines using Grid search algorithm and the classifier is trained using features based on heart rate variability derived from the ECG signal. The developed system is tested using the dataset and the results show that this classification system can recognize the disorder with an accuracy rate of 89%. Further, the use of the grid search algorithm has made this system a reliable and an accurate means for the classification of sleep apnea and can serve as a basis for the future development of its screening

    Sleep-wake stages classification using heart rate signals from pulse oximetry

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    The most important index of obstructive sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS) is the apnea/hyponea index (AHI). The AHI is the number of apnea/hypopnea events per hour of sleep. Algorithms for the screening of OSAHS from pulse oximetry estimate an approximation to AHI counting the desaturation events without consider the sleep stage of the patient. This paper presents an automatic system to determine if a patient is awake or asleep using heart rate (HR) signals provided by pulse oximetry. In this study, 70 features are estimated using entropy and complexity measures, frequency domain and time-scale domain methods, and classical statistics. The dimension of feature space is reduced from 70 to 40 using three different schemes based on forward feature selection with support vector machine and feature importance with random forest. The algorithms were designed, trained and tested with 5000 patients from the Sleep Heart Health Study database. In the test stage, 10-fold cross validation method was applied obtaining performances up to 85.2% accuracy, 88.3% specificity, 79.0% sensitivity, 67.0% positive predictive value, and 91.3% negative predictive value. The results are encouraging, showing the possibility of using HR signals obtained from the same oximeter to determine the sleep stage of the patient, and thus potentially improving the estimation of AHI based on only pulse oximetry.Fil: Casal, Ramiro. Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos. Instituto de Investigación y Desarrollo en Bioingeniería y Bioinformática - Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto de Investigación y Desarrollo en Bioingeniería y Bioinformática; ArgentinaFil: Di Persia, Leandro Ezequiel. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ingeniería y Ciencias Hídricas. Departamento de Informática. Laboratorio de Investigaciones en Señales e Inteligencia Computacional; ArgentinaFil: Schlotthauer, Gaston. Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos. Instituto de Investigación y Desarrollo en Bioingeniería y Bioinformática - Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto de Investigación y Desarrollo en Bioingeniería y Bioinformática; Argentin

    A review of automated sleep disorder detection

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    Automated sleep disorder detection is challenging because physiological symptoms can vary widely. These variations make it difficult to create effective sleep disorder detection models which support hu-man experts during diagnosis and treatment monitoring. From 2010 to 2021, authors of 95 scientific papers have taken up the challenge of automating sleep disorder detection. This paper provides an expert review of this work. We investigated whether digital technology and Artificial Intelligence (AI) can provide automated diagnosis support for sleep disorders. We followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines during the content discovery phase. We compared the performance of proposed sleep disorder detection methods, involving differ-ent datasets or signals. During the review, we found eight sleep disorders, of which sleep apnea and insomnia were the most studied. These disorders can be diagnosed using several kinds of biomedical signals, such as Electrocardiogram (ECG), Polysomnography (PSG), Electroencephalogram (EEG), Electromyogram (EMG), and snore sound. Subsequently, we established areas of commonality and distinctiveness. Common to all reviewed papers was that AI models were trained and tested with labelled physiological signals. Looking deeper, we discovered that 24 distinct algorithms were used for the detection task. The nature of these algorithms evolved, before 2017 only traditional Machine Learning (ML) was used. From 2018 onward, both ML and Deep Learning (DL) methods were used for sleep disorder detection. The strong emergence of DL algorithms has considerable implications for future detection systems because these algorithms demand significantly more data for training and testing when compared with ML. Based on our review results, we suggest that both type and amount of labelled data is crucial for the design of future sleep disorder detection systems because this will steer the choice of AI algorithm which establishes the desired decision support. As a guiding principle, more labelled data will help to represent the variations in symptoms. DL algorithms can extract information from these larger data quantities more effectively, therefore; we predict that the role of these algorithms will continue to expand

    ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE-ENABLED EDGE-CENTRIC SOLUTION FOR AUTOMATED ASSESSMENT OF SLEEP USING WEARABLES IN SMART HEALTH

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    ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE-ENABLED EDGE-CENTRIC SOLUTION FOR AUTOMATED ASSESSMENT OF SLEEP USING WEARABLES IN SMART HEALT
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