1,172 research outputs found

    Towards a tricorder: clinical, health economic, and ethical investigation of point-of-care artificial intelligence electrocardiogram for heart failure

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    Heart failure (HF) is an international public health priority and a focus of the NHS Long Term Plan. There is a particular need in primary care for screening and early detection of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) – the most common and serious HF subtype, and the only one with an abundant evidence base for effective therapies. Digital health technologies (DHTs) integrating artificial intelligence (AI) could improve diagnosis of HFrEF. Specifically, through a convergence of DHTs and AI, a single-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) can be recorded by a smart stethoscope and interrogated by AI (AI-ECG) to potentially serve as a point-of-care HFrEF test. However, there are concerning evidence gaps for such DHTs applying AI; across intersecting clinical, health economic, and ethical considerations. My thesis therefore investigates hypotheses that AI-ECG is 1.) Reliable, accurate, unbiased, and can be patient self-administered, 2.) Of justifiable health economic impact for primary care deployment, and 3.) Appropriate across ethical domains for deployment as a tool for patient self-administered screening. The theoretical basis for this work is presented in the Introduction (Chapter 1). Chapter 2 describes the first large-scale, multi-centre independent external validation study of AI-ECG, prospectively recruiting 1,050 patients and highlighting impressive performance: area under the curve, sensitivity, and specificity up to 0·91 (95% confidence interval: 0·88–0·95), 91·9% (78·1–98·3), and 80·2% (75·5–84·3) respectively; and absence of bias by age, sex, and ethnicity. Performance was independent of operator, and usability of the tool extended to patients being able to self-examine. Chapter 3 presents a clinical and health economic outcomes analysis using a contemporary digital repository of 2.5 million NHS patient records. A propensity-matched cohort was derived using all patients diagnosed with HF from 2015-2020 (n = 34,208). Novel findings included the unacceptable reality that 70% of index HF diagnoses are made through hospitalisation; where index diagnosis through primary care conferred a medium-term survival advantage and long-term cost saving (£2,500 per patient). This underpins a health economic model for the deployment of AI-ECG across primary care. Chapter 4 approaches a normative ethical analysis focusing on equity, agency, data rights, and responsibility for safe, effective, and trustworthy implementation of an unprecedented at-home patient self-administered AI-ECG screening programme. I propose approaches to mitigating any potential harms, towards preserving and promoting trust, patient engagement, and public health. Collectively, this thesis marks novel work highlighting AI-ECG as tool with the potential to address major cardiovascular public health priorities. Scrutiny through complimentary clinical, health economic, and ethical considerations can directly serve patients and health systems by blueprinting best-practice for the evaluation and implementation of DHTs integrating AI – building the conviction needed to realise the full potential of such technologies.Open Acces

    A framework for automated heart and lung sound analysis using a mobile telemedicine platform

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    Thesis (M. Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2010.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 246-261).Many resource-poor communities across the globe lack access to quality healthcare,due to shortages in medical expertise and poor availability of medical diagnostic devices. In recent years, mobile phones have become increasingly complex and ubiquitous. These devices present a tremendous opportunity to provide low-cost diagnostics to under-served populations and to connect non-experts with experts. This thesis explores the capture of cardiac and respiratory sounds on a mobile phone for analysis, with the long-term aim of developing intelligent algorithms for the detection of heart and respiratory-related problems. Using standard labeled databases, existing and novel algorithms are developed to analyze cardiac and respiratory audio data. In order to assess the algorithms' performance under field conditions, a low-cost stethoscope attachment is constructed and data is collected using a mobile phone. Finally, a telemedicine infrastructure and work-flow is described, in which these algorithms can be deployed and trained in a large-scale deployment.by Katherine L. Kuan.M.Eng

    IMPROVING THE QUALITY, ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF BODY SOUNDS ACQUIRED IN CHALLENGING CLINICAL SETTINGS

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    Despite advances in medicine and technology, Acute Lower Respiratory Diseases are a leading cause of sickness and mortality worldwide, highly affecting countries where access to appropriate medical technology and expertise is scarce. Chest auscultation provides a low-cost, non-invasive, widely available tool for the examination of pulmonary health. Despite universal adoption, its use is riddled by a number of issues including subjectivity in interpretation and vulnerability to ambient noise, limiting its diagnostic capability. Digital auscultation and computerized methods come as a natural aid towards overcoming such imposed limitations. Focused on the challenges, we address the demanding real-life scenario of pediatric lung auscultation in busy clinical settings. Two major objectives lead to our contributions: 1) Can we improve the quality of the delicate auscultated sounds and reduce unwanted noise contamination; 2) Can we augment the screening capabilities of current stethoscopes using computerized lung sound analysis to capture the presence of abnormal breaths, and can we standardize findings. To address the first objective, we developed an adaptive noise suppression scheme that tackles contamination coming from a variety of sources, including subject-centric and electronic artifacts, and environmental noise. The proposed method was validated using objective and subjective measures including an expert reviewer panel and objective signal quality metrics. Results revealed the ability and superiority of the proposed method to i) suppress unwanted noise when compared to state-of-the-art technology, and ii) faithfully maintain the signature of the delicate body sounds. The second objective was addressed by exploring appropriate feature representations that capture distinct characteristics of body sounds. A biomimetic approach was employed, and the acoustic signal was projected onto high-dimensional spaces spanning time, frequency, temporal dynamics and spectral modulations. Trained classifiers produced localized decisions on these breath content features, indicating lung diseases. Unlike existing literature, our proposed scheme is further able to combine and integrate the localized decisions into individual, patient-level evaluation. A large corpus of annotated patient data was used to validate our approach, demonstrating the superiority of the proposed features and patient evaluation scheme. Overall findings indicate that improved accessible auscultation care is possible, towards creating affordable health care solutions with worldwide impact

    Distinguishing Between Asthma and Pneumonia Through Automated Lung Sound Analysis

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    This project attempts to distinguish between two pulmonary disorders, asthma and pneumonia, using automated analysis of lung sounds. Such an approach minimizes the subjectivity of diagnosis inherent to current practices by physicians. Breath sounds are recorded by a physiological microphone and hardware acquisition system, and then analyzed in software using a two stage algorithm. The first stage detects abnormal lung sounds and second stage makes a diagnosis. A clinical trial was conducted at a pediatric clinic to validate the system

    Wrist-based Phonocardiogram Diagnosis Leveraging Machine Learning

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    With the tremendous growth of technology and the fast pace of life, the need for instant information has become an everyday necessity, more so in emergency cases when every minute counts towards saving lives. mHealth has been the adopted approach for quick diagnosis using mobile devices. However, it has been challenging due to the required high quality of data, high computation load, and high-power consumption. The aim of this research is to diagnose the heart condition based on phonocardiogram (PCG) analysis using Machine Learning techniques assuming limited processing power, in order to be encapsulated later in a mobile device. The diagnosis of PCG is performed using two techniques; 1. parametric estimation with multivariate classification, particularly discriminant function. Which will be explored at length using different number of descriptive features. The feature extraction will be performed using Wavelet Transform (Filter Bank). 2. Artificial Neural Networks, and specifically Pattern Recognition. This will also use decomposed version of PCG using Wavelet Transform (Filter Bank). The results showed 97.33% successful diagnosis using the first technique using PCG with a 19 dB Signal-to-Noise-Ratio. When the signal was decomposed into four sub-bands using a Filter Bank of the second order. Each sub-band was described using two features; the signal’s mean and covariance. Additionally, different Filter Bank orders and number of features are explored and compared. Using the second technique the diagnosis resulted in a 100% successful classification with 83.3% trust level. The results are assessed, and new improvements are recommended and discussed as part of future work.Teknologian valtavan kehittymisen ja nopean elämänrytmin myötä välittömästi saatu tieto on noussut jokapäiväiseksi välttämättömyydeksi, erityisesti hätätapauksissa, joissa jokainen säästetty minuutti on tärkeää ihmishenkien pelastamiseksi. Mobiiliterveys, eli mHealth, on yleisesti valjastettu käyttöön nopeaksi diagnoosimenetelmäksi mobiililaitteiden avulla. Käyttö on kuitenkin ollut haastavaa korkean datan laatuvaatimuksen ja suurten tiedonkäsittelyvaatimuksien, nopean laskentatehon ja sekä suuren virrankulutuksen vuoksi. Tämän tutkimuksen tavoitteena oli diagnosoida sydänsairauksia fonokardiogrammianalyysin (PCG) perusteella käyttämällä koneoppimistekniikoita niin, että käytettävä laskentateho rajoitetaan vastaamaan mobiililaitteiden kapasiteettia. PCG-diagnoosi tehtiin käyttäen kahta tekniikkaa 1. Parametrinen estimointi käyttäen moniulotteista luokitusta, erityisesti signaalien erotteluanalyysin avulla. Tätä asiaa tutkittiin syvällisesti käyttäen erilaisia tilastotieteellisesti kuvailevia piirteitä. Piirteiden irrotus suoritettiin käyttäen Wavelet-muunnosta ja suodatinpankkia. 2. Keinotekoisia neuroverkkoja ja erityisesti hahmontunnistusta. Tässä menetelmässä käytetään myös PCG-signaalin hajoitusta ja Wavelet-muunnos -suodatinpankkia. Tulokset osoittivat, että PCG 19dB:n signaali-kohina-suhteella voi johtaa 97,33% onnistuneeseen diagnoosiin käytettäessä ensimmäistä tekniikkaa. Signaalin hajottaminen neljään alikaistaan suoritettiin käyttämällä toisen asteen suodatinpankkia. Jokainen alikaista kuvattiin käyttäen kahta piirrettä: signaalin keskiarvoa ja kovarianssia, näin saatiin yhteensä kahdeksan ominaisuutta kuvaamaan noin yhden minuutin näytettä PCG-signaalista. Lisäksi tutkittiin ja verrattiin eriasteisia suodattimia ja piirteitä. Toista tekniikkaa käyttäen diagnoosi johti 100% onnistuneeseen luokitteluun 83,3% luotettavuustasolla. Tuloksia käsitellään ja pohditaan, sekä tehdään niistä johtopäätöksiä. Lopuksi ehdotetaan ja suositellaan käytettyihin menetelmiin uusia parannuksia jatkotutkimuskohteiksi.fi=vertaisarvioitu|en=peerReviewed

    Heart sounds:From animal to patient and Mhealth

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    Experience and Enlightenment of Handheld Ultrasound Applications in Multiple Scenarios Based on 5G Technology

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    In the digital age, the miniaturization of portable ultrasound equipment has brought both opportunities and challenges to the healthcare industry. Handheld ultrasound (HHU) devices are tablet or smartphone-sized scanners that are highly portable, have lower costs, produce no harmful side effects, and consume less power, making them suitable for use in different environments. HHU devices are primarily designed for new users of ultrasound scanners with varying backgrounds to evaluate different structures of the human body in various clinical settings. HHU applications based on Fifth-generation (5G) wireless network communication and artificial intelligence (AI) technology provide new healthcare solutions. The main application scenarios for HHU devices currently include in-hospital use, remote medical treatment, emergency rescue, and home monitoring. These scenarios allow for rapid image acquisition and real-time image interpretation, thereby improving the efficiency and quality of healthcare, reducing medical costs, and improving the allocation and utilization of medical resources. However, there remain some technical challenges and weaknesses such as device safety, data privacy, and network stability. With the continuous integration of AI technology, HHU applications will find wider use and promotion, bringing about more opportunities and challenges to the healthcare industry. This article reviews the application experience and insights of 5G technology in the field of HHU, aiming to provide fresh evidence and references for future research and applications
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