27 research outputs found

    Prediction of Labor Induction Success from the Uterine Electrohysterogram

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    [EN] Pharmacological agents are often used to induce labor. Failed inductions are associated with unnecessarily long waits and greater maternal-fetal risks, as well as higher costs. No reliable models are currently able to predict the induction outcome from common obstetric data (area under the ROC curve (AUC) between 0.6 and 0.7). The aim of this study was to design an early success-predictor system by extracting temporal, spectral, and complexity parameters from the uterine electromyogram (electrohysterogram (EHG)). Different types of feature sets were used to design and train artificial neural networks: Set_1: obstetrical features, Set_2: EHG features, and Set_3: EHG+obstetrical features. Predictor systems were built to classify three scenarios: (1) induced women who reached active phase of labor (APL) vs. women who did not achieve APL (non-APL), (2) APL and vaginal delivery vs. APL and cesarean section delivery, and (3) vaginal vs. cesarean delivery. For Scenario 3, we also proposed 2-step predictor systems consisting of the cascading predictor systems from Scenarios 1 and 2. EHG features outperformed traditional obstetrical features in all the scenarios. Little improvement was obtained by combining them (Set_3). The results show that the EHG can potentially be used to predict successful labor induction and outperforms the traditional obstetric features. Clinical use of this prediction system would help to improve maternal-fetal well-being and optimize hospital resources.This work received financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, the European Regional Development Fund (DPI2015-68397-R and RTI2018-094449-A-I00), Universitat Politècnica de València VLC/Campus (UPV-FE-2018-B02), Generalitat Valenciana (GV/2018/104), and Bial S.A.Benalcazar-Parra, C.; Ye Lin, Y.; Garcia-Casado, J.; Monfort-Ortiz, R.; Alberola Rubio, J.; Perales Marin, AJ.; Prats-Boluda, G. (2019). Prediction of Labor Induction Success from the Uterine Electrohysterogram. Journal of Sensors. 2019:1-12. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/6916251S1122019Filho, O. B. M., Albuquerque, R. M., & Cecatti, J. G. (2010). A randomized controlled trial comparing vaginal misoprostol versus Foley catheter plus oxytocin for labor induction. Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica, 89(8), 1045-1052. doi:10.3109/00016349.2010.499447Seyb, S. (1999). Risk of cesarean delivery with elective induction of labor at term in nulliparous women. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 94(4), 600-607. doi:10.1016/s0029-7844(99)00377-4Hou, L., Zhu, Y., Ma, X., Li, J., & Zhang, W. (2012). Clinical parameters for prediction of successful labor induction after application of intravaginal dinoprostone in nulliparous Chinese women. Medical Science Monitor, 18(8), CR518-CR522. doi:10.12659/msm.883273Pitarello, P. da R. P., Tadashi Yoshizaki, C., Ruano, R., & Zugaib, M. (2012). Prediction of successful labor induction using transvaginal sonographic cervical measurements. Journal of Clinical Ultrasound, 41(2), 76-83. doi:10.1002/jcu.21929Prado, C. A. de C., Araujo Júnior, E., Duarte, G., Quintana, S. M., Tonni, G., Cavalli, R. de C., & Marcolin, A. C. (2016). Predicting success of labor induction in singleton term pregnancies by combining maternal and ultrasound variables. The Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine, 1-35. doi:10.3109/14767058.2015.1135124Sievert, R. A., Kuper, S. G., Jauk, V. C., Parrish, M., Biggio, J. R., & Harper, L. M. (2017). Predictors of vaginal delivery in medically indicated early preterm induction of labor. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 217(3), 375.e1-375.e7. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2017.05.025Garfield, R. E., Maner, W. L., Maul, H., & Saade, G. R. (2005). Use of uterine EMG and cervical LIF in monitoring pregnant patients. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 112, 103-108. doi:10.1111/j.1471-0528.2005.00596.xFergus, P., Cheung, P., Hussain, A., Al-Jumeily, D., Dobbins, C., & Iram, S. (2013). Prediction of Preterm Deliveries from EHG Signals Using Machine Learning. PLoS ONE, 8(10), e77154. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0077154Aviram, A., Melamed, N., Hadar, E., Raban, O., Hiersch, L., & Yogev, Y. (2013). Effect of Prostaglandin E2 on Myometrial Electrical Activity in Women Undergoing Induction of Labor. American Journal of Perinatology, 31(05), 413-418. doi:10.1055/s-0033-1352486Benalcazar-Parra, C., Ye-Lin, Y., Garcia-Casado, J., Monfort-Orti, R., Alberola-Rubio, J., Perales, A., & Prats-Boluda, G. (2018). Electrohysterographic characterization of the uterine myoelectrical response to labor induction drugs. Medical Engineering & Physics, 56, 27-35. doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2018.04.002Benalcazar-Parra, C., Monfort-Orti, R., Ye-Lin, Y., Prats-Boluda, G., Alberola-Rubio, J., Perales, A., & Garcia-Casado, J. (2017). Comparison of labour induction with misoprostol and dinoprostone and characterization of uterine response based on electrohysterogram. The Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine, 32(10), 1586-1594. doi:10.1080/14767058.2017.1410791Maner, W. L., & Garfield, R. E. (2007). Identification of Human Term and Preterm Labor using Artificial Neural Networks on Uterine Electromyography Data. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 35(3), 465-473. doi:10.1007/s10439-006-9248-8Diab, M. O., Marque, C., & Khalil, M. (2009). An unsupervised classification method of uterine electromyography signals: Classification for detection of preterm deliveries. Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research, 35(1), 9-19. doi:10.1111/j.1447-0756.2008.00981.xShi, S.-Q., Maner, W. L., Mackay, L. 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IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 46(10), 1222-1229. doi:10.1109/10.790499BUHIMSCHI, C., BOYLE, M., & GARFIELD, R. (1997). Electrical activity of the human uterus during pregnancy as recorded from the abdominal surface. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 90(1), 102-111. doi:10.1016/s0029-7844(97)83837-9Schlembach, D., Maner, W. L., Garfield, R. E., & Maul, H. (2009). Monitoring the progress of pregnancy and labor using electromyography. European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 144, S33-S39. doi:10.1016/j.ejogrb.2009.02.016Alamedine, D., Diab, A., Muszynski, C., Karlsson, B., Khalil, M., & Marque, C. (2014). Selection algorithm for parameters to characterize uterine EHG signals for the detection of preterm labor. Signal, Image and Video Processing, 8(6), 1169-1178. doi:10.1007/s11760-014-0655-2Fele-Žorž, G., Kavšek, G., Novak-Antolič, Ž., & Jager, F. (2008). A comparison of various linear and non-linear signal processing techniques to separate uterine EMG records of term and pre-term delivery groups. Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 46(9), 911-922. doi:10.1007/s11517-008-0350-yTerrien, J., Marque, C., Gondry, J., Steingrimsdottir, T., & Karlsson, B. (2010). Uterine electromyogram database and processing function interface: An open standard analysis platform for electrohysterogram signals. Computers in Biology and Medicine, 40(2), 223-230. doi:10.1016/j.compbiomed.2009.11.019Hassan, M., Terrien, J., Marque, C., & Karlsson, B. (2011). Comparison between approximate entropy, correntropy and time reversibility: Application to uterine electromyogram signals. Medical Engineering & Physics, 33(8), 980-986. doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2011.03.010Lemancewicz, A., Borowska, M., Kuć, P., Jasińska, E., Laudański, P., Laudański, T., & Oczeretko, E. (2016). 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    Electrohysterographic characterization of the uterine myoelectrical response to labor induction drugs

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    [EN] Labor induction is a common practice to promote uterine contractions and labor onset. Uterine electrohysterogram (EHG) has proved its suitability for characterizing the uterus electrophysiological condition in women with spontaneous labor. The aim of this study was to characterize and compare uterine myoelectrical activity during the first 4h in response to labor induction drugs, Misoprostol (G1) and Dinoprostone (G2), by analyzing the differences between women who achieved active phase of labor and those who did not (successful and failed inductions). A set of temporal, spectral and complexity parameters were computed from the EHG-bursts. As for successful inductions, statistical significant and sustained increases with respect to basal period were obtained for EHG amplitude, mean frequency, uterine activity index (UAI) and Teager, after 60¿ for the G1 group; duration, amplitude, number of contractions and UAI for the G2 group, after 120¿. Moreover, Teager showed statistical significant and sustained differences between successful and failed inductions (1.43±1.45 µV2.Hz2.105 vs. 0.40±0.26 µV2.Hz2.105 after 240¿) for the G1 group, but not in the G2 group, probably due to the slower pharmacokinetics of this drug. These results revealed that EHG could be useful for successful induction prediction in the early stages of induction, especially when using Misoprostol.This research project was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and the European Regional Development Fund (DPI2015-68397-R) and by the company Bial SA.Benalcazar-Parra, C.; Ye Lin, Y.; Garcia Casado, J.; Monfort-Orti, R.; Alberola Rubio, J.; Perales Marín, AJ.; Prats-Boluda, G. (2018). Electrohysterographic characterization of the uterine myoelectrical response to labor induction drugs. Medical Engineering & Physics. 56:27-35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.medengphy.2018.04.002S27355

    A Comparative Study of Vaginal Labor and Caesarean Section Postpartum Uterine Myoelectrical Activity

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    [EN] Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is one of the major causes of maternal mortality and morbidity worldwide, with uterine atony being the most common origin. Currently there are no obstetrical techniques available for monitoring postpartum uterine dynamics, as tocodynamometry is not able to detect weak uterine contractions. In this study, we explored the feasibility of monitoring postpartum uterine activity by non-invasive electrohysterography (EHG), which has been proven to outperform tocodynamometry in detecting uterine contractions during pregnancy. A comparison was made of the temporal, spectral, and non-linear parameters of postpartum EHG characteristics of vaginal deliveries and elective cesareans. In the vaginal delivery group, EHG obtained a significantly higher amplitude and lower kurtosis of the Hilbert envelope, and spectral content was shifted toward higher frequencies than in the cesarean group. In the non-linear parameters, higher values were found for the fractal dimension and lower values for Lempel-Ziv, sample entropy and spectral entropy in vaginal deliveries suggesting that the postpartum EHG signal is extremely non-linear but more regular and predictable than in a cesarean. The results obtained indicate that postpartum EHG recording could be a helpful tool for earlier detection of uterine atony and contribute to better management of prophylactic uterotonic treatment for PPH prevention.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, the European Regional Development Fund (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE RTI2018-094449-A-I00-AR) and the Generalitat Valenciana (GV/2018/104 and AICO/2019/220).Díaz-Martínez, MDA.; Mas-Cabo, J.; Prats-Boluda, G.; Garcia-Casado, J.; Cardona-Urrego, K.; Monfort-Ortiz, R.; Lopez-Corral, A.... (2020). A Comparative Study of Vaginal Labor and Caesarean Section Postpartum Uterine Myoelectrical Activity. 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Low-complexity intrauterine pressure estimation using the Teager energy operator on electrohysterographic recordings. Physiological Measurement, 35(7), 1215-1228. doi:10.1088/0967-3334/35/7/1215Schlembach, D., Maner, W. L., Garfield, R. E., & Maul, H. (2009). Monitoring the progress of pregnancy and labor using electromyography. European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 144, S33-S39. doi:10.1016/j.ejogrb.2009.02.016Fele-Žorž, G., Kavšek, G., Novak-Antolič, Ž., & Jager, F. (2008). A comparison of various linear and non-linear signal processing techniques to separate uterine EMG records of term and pre-term delivery groups. Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 46(9), 911-922. doi:10.1007/s11517-008-0350-yHassan, M., Terrien, J., Marque, C., & Karlsson, B. (2011). Comparison between approximate entropy, correntropy and time reversibility: Application to uterine electromyogram signals. Medical Engineering & Physics, 33(8), 980-986. doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2011.03.010Mas-Cabo, J., Prats-Boluda, G., Perales, A., Garcia-Casado, J., Alberola-Rubio, J., & Ye-Lin, Y. (2018). Uterine electromyography for discrimination of labor imminence in women with threatened preterm labor under tocolytic treatment. Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 57(2), 401-411. doi:10.1007/s11517-018-1888-yLemancewicz, A., Borowska, M., Kuć, P., Jasińska, E., Laudański, P., Laudański, T., & Oczeretko, E. (2016). Early diagnosis of threatened premature labor by electrohysterographic recordings – The use of digital signal processing. Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering, 36(1), 302-307. doi:10.1016/j.bbe.2015.11.005Mas-Cabo, J., Prats-Boluda, G., Garcia-Casado, J., Alberola-Rubio, J., Perales, A., & Ye-Lin, Y. (2019). Design and Assessment of a Robust and Generalizable ANN-Based Classifier for the Prediction of Premature Birth by means of Multichannel Electrohysterographic Records. 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    Uterine myoelectrical activity as biomarker of successful induction with Dinoprostone: Influence of parity

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    [EN] The prolonged latent phase of Induction of Labour (IOL) is associated with increased risks of maternal mortality and morbidity. Electrohysterography (EHG) has outperformed traditional clinical measures monitoring labour progress. Although parity is agreed to be of particular relevance to the success of IOL, no previous EHG¿related studies have been found in the literature. We thus aimed to identify EHG¿biomarkers to predict IOL success (active phase of labour in¿¿¿24¿h) and determine the influence of the myoelectrical response on the parity of this group. Statistically significant and sustained differences between the successful and failed groups were found from 150¿min in amplitude and non¿linear parameters, especially in Spectral Entropy and in their progression rates. In the nulliparous¿parous comparison, parous women showed statistically significantly higher amplitude progression rate. These biomarkers would therefore be useful for early detection of the risk of induction failure and would help to develop more robust and generalizable IOL success¿prediction systems.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and the European Regional Development Fund (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE RTI2018-094449-A-I00-AR and PID2021-124038OB-I00). Funding for open access charge: CRUE-Universitat Politècnica de ValènciaDiaz-Martinez, A.; Monfort-Ortiz, R.; Ye Lin, Y.; Garcia-Casado, J.; Nieto-Tous, M.; Nieto Del-Amor, F.; Diago-Almela, VJ.... (2023). Uterine myoelectrical activity as biomarker of successful induction with Dinoprostone: Influence of parity. Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering (Online). 43(1):142-156. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbe.2022.12.00414215643

    Electrohysterography in the diagnosis of preterm birth: a review

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    This is an author-created, un-copyedited versíon of an article published in Physiological Measurement. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsíble for any errors or omissíons in this versíon of the manuscript or any versíon derived from it. The Versíon of Record is available online at http://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/aaad56.[EN] Preterm birth (PTB) is one of the most common and serious complications in pregnancy. About 15 million preterm neonates are born every year, with ratios of 10-15% of total births. In industrialized countries, preterm delivery is responsible for 70% of mortality and 75% of morbidity in the neonatal period. Diagnostic means for its timely risk assessment are lacking and the underlying physiological mechanisms are unclear. Surface recording of the uterine myoelectrical activity (electrohysterogram, EHG) has emerged as a better uterine dynamics monitoring technique than traditional surface pressure recordings and provides information on the condition of uterine muscle in different obstetrical scenarios with emphasis on predicting preterm deliveries. Objective: A comprehensive review of the literature was performed on studies related to the use of the electrohysterogram in the PTB context. Approach: This review presents and discusses the results according to the different types of parameter (temporal and spectral, non-linear and bivariate) used for EHG characterization. Main results: Electrohysterogram analysis reveals that the uterine electrophysiological changes that precede spontaneous preterm labor are associated with contractions of more intensity, higher frequency content, faster and more organized propagated activity and stronger coupling of different uterine areas. Temporal, spectral, non-linear and bivariate EHG analyses therefore provide useful and complementary information. Classificatory techniques of different types and varying complexity have been developed to diagnose PTB. The information derived from these different types of EHG parameters, either individually or in combination, is able to provide more accurate predictions of PTB than current clinical methods. However, in order to extend EHG to clinical applications, the recording set-up should be simplified, be less intrusive and more robust-and signal analysis should be automated without requiring much supervision and yield physiologically interpretable results. Significance: This review provides a general background to PTB and describes how EHG can be used to better understand its underlying physiological mechanisms and improve its prediction. The findings will help future research workers to decide the most appropriate EHG features to be used in their analyses and facilitate future clinical EHG applications in order to improve PTB prediction.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and the European Regional Development Fund under grant DPI2015-68397-R.Garcia-Casado, J.; Ye Lin, Y.; Prats-Boluda, G.; Mas-Cabo, J.; Alberola Rubio, J.; Perales Marin, AJ. (2018). Electrohysterography in the diagnosis of preterm birth: a review. Physiological Measurement. 39(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/aaad56S39

    Dispersion Entropy: A Measure of Electrohysterographic Complexity for Preterm Labor Discrimination

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    [EN] Although preterm labor is a major cause of neonatal death and often leaves health sequels in the survivors, there are no accurate and reliable clinical tools for preterm labor prediction. The Electrohysterogram (EHG) has arisen as a promising alternative that provides relevant information on uterine activity that could be useful in predicting preterm labor. In this work, we optimized and assessed the performance of the Dispersion Entropy (DispEn) metric and compared it to conventional Sample Entropy (SampEn) in EHG recordings to discriminate term from preterm deliveries. For this, we used the two public databases TPEHG and TPEHGT DS of EHG recordings collected from women during regular checkups. The 10th, 50th and 90th percentiles of entropy metrics were computed on whole (WBW) and fast wave high (FWH) EHG bandwidths, sweeping the DispEn and SampEn internal parameters to optimize term/preterm discrimination. The results revealed that for both the FWH and WBW bandwidths the best separability was reached when computing the 10th percentile, achieving a p-value (0.00007) for DispEn in FWH, c = 7 and m = 2, associated with lower complexity preterm deliveries, indicating that DispEn is a promising parameter for preterm labor prediction.This work was supported by the Spanish ministry of economy and competitiveness, the European Regional Development Fund (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE RTI2018-094449-A-I00-AR) and the Generalitat Valenciana (AICO/2019/220).Nieto-Del-Amor, F.; Ye Lin, Y.; Garcia-Casado, J.; Díaz-Martínez, MDA.; González Martínez, M.; Monfort-Ortiz, R.; Prats-Boluda, G. (2021). Dispersion Entropy: A Measure of Electrohysterographic Complexity for Preterm Labor Discrimination. SCITEPRESS. 260-267. https://doi.org/10.5220/0010316602600267S26026

    Characterization of the effects of Atosiban on uterine electromyograms recorded in women with threatened preterm labor

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    [EN] Although research studies using electrohysterography on women without tocolytic therapy have shown its potential for preterm birth diagnosis, tocolytics are usually administered in emergency rooms at the first sign of threatened preterm labor (TPL). Information on the uterine response during tocolytic treatment could prove useful for the development of tools able to predict true preterm deliveries under normal clinical conditions. The aim of this study was thus to analyze the effects of Atosiban on Electrohysterogram (EHG) parameters and to compare its effects on women who delivered preterm (WDP) and at term (WDT). Electrohysterograms recorded in different Atosiban therapy stages (before, during and after drug administration) on 40 WDT and 27 WDP were analyzed by computing linear, and non-linear EHG parameters. Results reveal that Atosiban does not greatly affect the EHG signal amplitude, but does modify its spectral content and reduces the energy associated with the fast wave high component in both WDP and WDT, with a faster response in the latter. EHG signal complexity remained constant in WDT, while it increased in WDP until it reached similar values to WDT during Atosiban treatment. The spectral and complexity parameters were able to separate (p < 0.05) WDT and WDP prior to and during tocolytic treatment and before and after treatment, respectively. The results pave the way for developing better and more reliable medical decision support systems based on EHG for preterm delivery prediction in TPL women in clinical scenarios.This work received financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and the European Regional Development Fund (DPI2015-68397-R), VLC/Campus (UPV-FE-2018-B03) and by Conselleria de Educación, Investigación, Cultura y Deporte, Generalitat Valenciana (GV/2018/104).Mas-Cabo, J.; Prats-Boluda, G.; Ye Lin, Y.; Alberola Rubio, J.; Perales, A.; Garcia-Casado, J. (2019). Characterization of the effects of Atosiban on uterine electromyograms recorded in women with threatened preterm labor. Biomedical Signal Processing and Control. 52:198-205. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bspc.2019.04.001S1982055

    Robust Characterization of the Uterine Myoelectrical Activity in Different Obstetric Scenarios

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    [EN] Electrohysterography (EHG) has been shown to provide relevant information on uterine activity and could be used for predicting preterm labor and identifying other maternal fetal risks. The extraction of high-quality robust features is a key factor in achieving satisfactory prediction systems from EHG. Temporal, spectral, and non-linear EHG parameters have been computed to characterize EHG signals, sometimes obtaining controversial results, especially for non-linear parameters. The goal of this work was to assess the performance of EHG parameters in identifying those robust enough for uterine electrophysiological characterization. EHG signals were picked up in different obstetric scenarios: antepartum, including women who delivered on term, labor, and post-partum. The results revealed that the 10th and 90th percentiles, for parameters with falling and rising trends as labor approaches, respectively, differentiate between these obstetric scenarios better than median analysis window values. Root-mean-square amplitude, spectral decile 3, and spectral moment ratio showed consistent tendencies for the different obstetric scenarios as well as non-linear parameters: Lempel-Ziv, sample entropy, spectral entropy, and SD1/SD2 when computed in the fast wave high bandwidth. These findings would make it possible to extract high quality and robust EHG features to improve computer-aided assessment tools for pregnancy, labor, and postpartum progress and identify maternal fetal risks.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, the European Regional Development Fund (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE RTI2018-094449-A-I00-AR) and the Generalitat Valenciana (AICO/2019/220 & GV/2018/104)Mas-Cabo, J.; Ye Lin, Y.; Garcia-Casado, J.; Díaz-Martínez, MDA.; Perales-Marin, A.; Monfort-Ortiz, R.; Roca-Prats, A.... (2020). Robust Characterization of the Uterine Myoelectrical Activity in Different Obstetric Scenarios. Entropy. 22(7):1-15. https://doi.org/10.3390/e22070743S115227Wagura, P., Wasunna, A., Laving, A., Wamalwa, D., & Ng’ang’a, P. (2018). Prevalence and factors associated with preterm birth at kenyatta national hospital. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 18(1). doi:10.1186/s12884-018-1740-2Liu, L., Johnson, H. L., Cousens, S., Perin, J., Scott, S., Lawn, J. E., … Black, R. E. (2012). Global, regional, and national causes of child mortality: an updated systematic analysis for 2010 with time trends since 2000. The Lancet, 379(9832), 2151-2161. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(12)60560-1Howson, C. P., Kinney, M. V., McDougall, L., & Lawn, J. E. (2013). Born Too Soon: Preterm birth matters. Reproductive Health, 10(S1). doi:10.1186/1742-4755-10-s1-s1Euliano, T. Y., Nguyen, M. T., Darmanjian, S., McGorray, S. P., Euliano, N., Onkala, A., & Gregg, A. R. (2013). Monitoring uterine activity during labor: a comparison of 3 methods. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 208(1), 66.e1-66.e6. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2012.10.873Devedeux, D., Marque, C., Mansour, S., Germain, G., & Duchêne, J. (1993). Uterine electromyography: A critical review. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 169(6), 1636-1653. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(93)90456-sChkeir, A., Fleury, M.-J., Karlsson, B., Hassan, M., & Marque, C. (2013). Patterns of electrical activity synchronization in the pregnant rat uterus. BioMedicine, 3(3), 140-144. doi:10.1016/j.biomed.2013.04.007Fele-Žorž, G., Kavšek, G., Novak-Antolič, Ž., & Jager, F. (2008). A comparison of various linear and non-linear signal processing techniques to separate uterine EMG records of term and pre-term delivery groups. Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 46(9), 911-922. doi:10.1007/s11517-008-0350-yMas-Cabo, J., Prats-Boluda, G., Perales, A., Garcia-Casado, J., Alberola-Rubio, J., & Ye-Lin, Y. (2018). Uterine electromyography for discrimination of labor imminence in women with threatened preterm labor under tocolytic treatment. Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 57(2), 401-411. doi:10.1007/s11517-018-1888-yVinken, M. P. G. C., Rabotti, C., Mischi, M., & Oei, S. G. (2009). Accuracy of Frequency-Related Parameters of the Electrohysterogram for Predicting Preterm Delivery. Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 64(8), 529-541. doi:10.1097/ogx.0b013e3181a8c6b1Hassan, M., Terrien, J., Marque, C., & Karlsson, B. (2011). Comparison between approximate entropy, correntropy and time reversibility: Application to uterine electromyogram signals. Medical Engineering & Physics, 33(8), 980-986. doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2011.03.010Lemancewicz, A., Borowska, M., Kuć, P., Jasińska, E., Laudański, P., Laudański, T., & Oczeretko, E. (2016). Early diagnosis of threatened premature labor by electrohysterographic recordings – The use of digital signal processing. Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering, 36(1), 302-307. doi:10.1016/j.bbe.2015.11.005Garcia-Casado, J., Ye-Lin, Y., Prats-Boluda, G., Mas-Cabo, J., Alberola-Rubio, J., & Perales, A. (2018). Electrohysterography in the diagnosis of preterm birth: a review. Physiological Measurement, 39(2), 02TR01. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aaad56Most, O., Langer, O., Kerner, R., Ben David, G., & Calderon, I. (2008). Can myometrial electrical activity identify patients in preterm labor? American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 199(4), 378.e1-378.e6. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2008.08.003Verdenik, I., Pajntar, M., & Leskošek, B. (2001). Uterine electrical activity as predictor of preterm birth in women with preterm contractions. European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 95(2), 149-153. doi:10.1016/s0301-2115(00)00418-8Horoba, K., Jezewski, J., Matonia, A., Wrobel, J., Czabanski, R., & Jezewski, M. (2016). Early predicting a risk of preterm labour by analysis of antepartum electrohysterograhic signals. Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering, 36(4), 574-583. doi:10.1016/j.bbe.2016.06.004Lucovnik, M., Maner, W. L., Chambliss, L. R., Blumrick, R., Balducci, J., Novak-Antolic, Z., & Garfield, R. E. (2011). Noninvasive uterine electromyography for prediction of preterm delivery. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 204(3), 228.e1-228.e10. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2010.09.024Smrdel, A., & Jager, F. (2015). Separating sets of term and pre-term uterine EMG records. Physiological Measurement, 36(2), 341-355. doi:10.1088/0967-3334/36/2/341Maner, W. (2003). Predicting term and preterm delivery with transabdominal uterine electromyography. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 101(6), 1254-1260. doi:10.1016/s0029-7844(03)00341-7Leman, H., Marque, C., & Gondry, J. (1999). Use of the electrohysterogram signal for characterization of contractions during pregnancy. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 46(10), 1222-1229. doi:10.1109/10.790499Mischi, M., Chen, C., Ignatenko, T., de Lau, H., Ding, B., Oei, S. G. G., & Rabotti, C. (2018). Dedicated Entropy Measures for Early Assessment of Pregnancy Progression From Single-Channel Electrohysterography. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 65(4), 875-884. doi:10.1109/tbme.2017.2723933Garfield, R. E., Maner, W. 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    Uterine contractions clustering based on surface electromyography: an input for pregnancy monitoring

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    Tese de mestrado em Bioestatística, apresentada à Universidade de Lisboa, através da Faculdade de Ciências, em 2018Inicialmente a investigação da contratilidade uterina recorria à utilização de dois métodos: o tocograma externo e o cateter de pressão intrauterino. Ambos os métodos apresentam limitações ao nível da avaliação do risco de parto prematuro e na monitorização da gravidez. O EHG (Electrohisterograma) é um método alternativo ao tocograma externo e ao cateter de pressão intrauterino. Este método pode ser aplicado de forma invasiva no músculo uterino, ou de forma não invasiva através de elétrodos colocados no abdómen. O EHG tem sido considerado uma ferramenta adequada para a monitorização da gravidez e do parto. O índice de massa corporal tem um impacto quase impercetível no EHG, sendo esta uma das principais características deste método. O EHG pode também ser utilizado para identificar as mulheres que vão entrar em trabalho de parto e ainda auxiliar na tomada de decisão médica quanto à utilização da terapia tocolítica (antagonista da oxitocina), evitando deste modo a ingestão de medicação desnecessária e os consequentes efeitos secundários. Na literatura existem apenas cinco casos publicados em que foi realizada uma separação dos principais eventos do sinal EHG: contrações, movimentos fetais, ondas Alvarez e ondas LDBF (Longue Durée Basse Fréquence). Em três das publicações a separação dos eventos foi feita manualmente e nos restantes casos algoritmos, como redes neuronais, foram aplicados ao EHG. As ondas Alvarez e as Braxton-Hicks são as mais reconhecidas. As ondas Alvarez foram descritas pela primeira vez nos anos cinquenta e as Braxton-Hicks foram descritas pela primeira vez em 1872 sendo detetadas através de palpação. As ondas Alvarez são ocasionalmente sentidas pela mulher. Estas ondas estão localizadas numa pequena área do tecido uterino sem propagação e podem levar a contrações com maior intensidade e, consequentemente, ao parto pré-termo. As Braxton-Hicks são contrações ineficientes registadas a partir da 20ª semana de gravidez que se tornam mais frequentes e intensas com o decorrer da gravidez. Estas contrações são menos localizadas que as ondas Alvarez e, durante o parto, propagam-se por todo o tecido uterino num curto período de tempo. As Braxton-Hicks estão associadas a uma diminuição do ritmo cardíaco fetal. As ondas LDBF são contrações de longa duração associadas a hipertonia uterina, quando há contração do tecido uterino sem retorno ao relaxamento muscular, o que representa um risco na gravidez. Neste trabalho foram utilizadas duas bases de dados. Na base de dados da Islândia existem 122 registos de 45 mulheres, dos quais apenas 4 correspondem a partos pré-termo. Na base de dados TPEHG (Term-Preterm EHG) existem 300 registos, dos quais 38 correspondem a partos pré-termo. Neste trabalho foram escolhidos canais bipolares, visto que estes reduzem o ruído idêntico, como o ECG (Eletrocardiograma) materno ou movimentos respiratórios. Para ambas as bases de dados os sinais originais de EHG foram processados e filtrados. Na estimação espetral foram considerados dois métodos: paramétricos e não paramétricos. O método Welch foi escolhido pois representa um bom compromisso entre ambos. Este método foi utilizado para calcular o espectro de cada evento detetado no sinal EHG. Para detetar os eventos no sinal EHG foram considerados cinco métodos baseados na energia ou amplitude. O método Wavelet foi o escolhido pois após uma inspeção visual, este era o método que delineava melhor as contrações. Na base de dados da Islândia foram identificadas 3136 contrações e na TPEHG foram encontradas 4622 contrações. O objetivo principal desta tese é obter clusters de contrações detetadas no sinal EHG. No entanto, as contrações são séries temporais não estacionárias, e a sua classificação visual é inviável a longo termo e também difícil de aplicar na prática clínica. Existem vários parâmetros que podem ser extraídos do sinal EHG, mas o espectro das contrações foi o método escolhido visto que este representa o sinal EHG e tem sempre a mesma dimensão, independentemente da duração da contração. As distâncias espetrais têm sido utilizadas com sucesso no reconhecimento áudio. Neste trabalho foi realizada uma aplicação desse método ao processamento do EHG, no qual foram realizados os ajustes necessários. Para comparar os espectros foram estudadas 8 distâncias diferentes: Itakura-Saito, COSH, Itakura, Itakura simétrica, Kullback-Leibler, Jeffrey, Rényi e Jensen-Rényi. Apenas as distâncias simétricas foram selecionadas para um estudo mais detalhado visto que estas são, segundo a literatura, as distâncias mais adequadas aquando do clustering. Após comparação das distâncias simétricas, a divergência de Jeffrey foi a selecionada para a comparação dos espectros. Nesta tese foram avaliados três métodos diferentes de clustering: o linkage, o K-means e o K-medoids. O linkage é um método hierárquico. Os clusters que resultam do agrupamento hierárquico estão organizados numa estrutura chamada dendrograma. No agrupamento hierárquico, não é necessário predeterminar o número de clusters, o que torna este um método ideal na exploração dos dados. O K-means e o K-medoids são métodos de partição, nos quais os dados são separados em k clusters decididos previamente. Os clusters são definidos de forma a otimizar a função da distância. No algoritmo K-means, os clusters baseiam-se na proximidade entre si de acordo com uma distância predeterminada. A diferença entre o K-medoids e o K-means é que o K-medoids escolhe pontos de dados como centros, chamados de medoides, enquanto K-means usa centróides. Após uma comparação dos diferentes métodos de clustering foi escolhido neste trabalho foi o average linkage, visto que este apresentava melhores resultados quer na separação dos espectros quer na silhueta. É então apresentado um método inovador no qual se utiliza todo o espectro das contrações detetadas automaticamente no EHG para o clustering não supervisionado. Esta técnica é uma contribuição para a classificação automática das diferentes contrações, especialmente aquelas mais reconhecidas na literatura: Alvarez e Braxton-Hicks. Era expectável encontrar um cluster isolado com as ondas LDBF, visto que estas representam um risco para o feto. O principal objetivo era juntar num cluster os espectros semelhantes das contrações, e relacioná-lo com o respetivo tipo de contração. Essa tarefa foi concluída através da identificação positiva de Alvarez e Braxton-Hicks. O clustering forneceu ainda algumas pistas sobre ondas Alvarez que não foram encontradas com o algoritmo de deteção de contrações, situação para a qual um método alternativo é apresentado. É sugerido que as ondas Alvarez sejam detetadas com métodos baseados na frequência, como, por exemplo, a frequência instantânea, no entanto este método não foi desenvolvido neste trabalho. Em relação às ondas LDBF, estas foram encontradas no cluster das Braxton-Hicks. É sugerido que a deteção das ondas LDBF seja baseada na sua caraterística mais distinta: a longa duração. Verificou-se que os casos pré-termo e os registos pré-parto não ficaram isolados num cluster, não se tendo encontrado uma relação entre a idade gestacional e o tipo de contração. Conclui-se que as contrações mais curtas apresentam maior amplitude do que as contrações com maior duração. Baseado em estudos anteriores sobre a eletrofisiologia do útero, supõem-se que o início do trabalho de parto pré-termo e termo esteja associado a sequências específicas de diferentes tipos de contrações, nas quais as ondas Alvares desempenham um papel importante. As contrações identificadas como Alvarez e Braxton-Hicks não são usadas como tal na prática clínica apesar de a maioria das contrações detetadas pelo tocograma serem Braxton-Hicks. O interesse pelas ondas Alvarez diminuiu rapidamente visto que estas ondas são praticamente indetetáveis pelo método de referência de deteção de contrações: o tocograma. As capacidades e a resolução do EHG levaram à renovação do estudo das contrações mais subtis, incluindo as Alvarez. Este trabalho é uma contribuição para a investigação nesta área.An innovative technique is introduced wherein where an unsupervised clustering method using as feature the whole spectrum of automatically detected contractions on the EHG (Electrohysterogram) is presented as a contribution to the automatic classification of the different uterine contractions, at least those that have been most recognized in the literature: Alvarez and Braxton-Hicks. It was expected to also be able to cluster the LDBF (Longue Durée Basse Fréquence) components, as these pose a fetal risk. The main task was to have the spectral contractions descriptions clustered and linked to the respective contraction type. That task was completed with positive identification of the Alvarez and Braxton-Hicks. The clustering process also provided clues regarding the missed Alvarez waves in the contraction detection algorithm, for which an alternative technique is suggested but not developed in this work. Regarding the LDBF they were found in the Braxton-Hicks cluster. It is suggested the LDBF´s to be detected based in their most prominent feature: the long duration. It is presented the rationale behind the selection of a cost function to be used in the spectral distance’s algorithm. Spectral distances have been successfully used in audio recognition and this works represents an application to the EHG processing, for which the necessary adjustments have to be implemented. It was found that no single cluster pointed to the preterm cases, or indeed to the pre-labor subject recordings. It is hypothesized, based on previous studies in uterine electrophysiology, that the initiation of pre-term or term labor should be associated with triggering contraction sequences of different types, where the Alvarez waves play a major role. Alvarez and Braxton-Hicks, labeled as such, are not typically used in the clinical environment despite most of the Tocogram detected contractions being the latter. Alvarez waves are not usually detectable by the Tocogram. Alvarez were firstly detected invasively in the early fifties, and Braxton-Hicks in 1872 using routine palpation techniques. The interest in Alvarez components declined rapidly since being practically undetectable by the de facto reference in the contraction detection: the Tocogram. The EHG capabilities and resolution made it possible to revive the research on the most subtle uterine contractions, Alvarez included and this work is a contribution in this research area

    Optimized Feature Subset Selection Using Genetic Algorithm for Preterm Labor Prediction Based on Electrohysterography

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    [EN] Electrohysterography (EHG) has emerged as an alternative technique to predict preterm labor, which still remains a challenge for the scientific-technical community. Based on EHG parameters, complex classification algorithms involving non-linear transformation of the input features, which clinicians found difficult to interpret, were generally used to predict preterm labor. We proposed to use genetic algorithm to identify the optimum feature subset to predict preterm labor using simple classification algorithms. A total of 203 parameters from 326 multichannel EHG recordings and obstetric data were used as input features. We designed and validated 3 base classifiers based on k-nearest neighbors, linear discriminant analysis and logistic regression, achieving F1-score of 84.63 ± 2.76%, 89.34 ± 3.5% and 86.87 ± 4.53%, respectively, for incoming new data. The results reveal that temporal, spectral and non-linear EHG parameters computed in different bandwidths from multichannel recordings provide complementary information on preterm labor prediction. We also developed an ensemble classifier that not only outperformed base classifiers but also reduced their variability, achieving an F1-score of 92.04 ± 2.97%, which is comparable with those obtained using complex classifiers. Our results suggest the feasibility of developing a preterm labor prediction system with high generalization capacity using simple easy-to-interpret classification algorithms to assist in transferring the EHG technique to clinical practice.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, the European Regional Development Fund (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE RTI2018-094449-A-I00-AR) and by the Generalitat Valenciana (AICO/2019/220).Nieto-Del-Amor, F.; Prats-Boluda, G.; Martínez-De-Juan, JL.; Díaz-Martínez, MDA.; Monfort-Ortiz, R.; Diago-Almela, VJ.; Ye Lin, Y. (2021). Optimized Feature Subset Selection Using Genetic Algorithm for Preterm Labor Prediction Based on Electrohysterography. Sensors. 21(10):1-15. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21103350S115211
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