192 research outputs found

    Joint symbolic dynamics for the assessment of cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory interactions

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    Beat-to-beat variations in heart period provide information on cardiovascular control and are closely linked to variations in arterial pressure and respiration. Joint symbolic analysis of heart period, systolic arterial pressure and respiration allows for a simple description of their shared short-term dynamics that are governed by cardiac baroreflex control and cardiorespiratory coupling. In this review, we discuss methodology and research applications. Studies suggest that analysis of joint symbolic dynamics provides a powerful tool for identifying physiological and pathophysiological changes in cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory control.Mathias Baumert, Michal Javorka and Muammar Kabi

    Feasibility of Ultra-short Term Complexity Analysis of Heart Rate Variability in Resting State and During Orthostatic Stress

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    In this work, we study ultra-short term (UST) complexity of Heart Rate Variability (HRV) and its agreement with analysis of standard short-term (ST) HRV recordings obtained at rest and during orthostatic stress. Conditional Entropy (CE) measures have been computed using both a linear Gaussian approximation and a more accurate model-free approach based on nearest neighbors. The agreement between UST and ST indices has been compared via statistical tests and correlation analysis, suggesting the feasibility of exploiting faster algorithms and shorter time series for detecting changes in cardiovascular control during various states

    Input for baroreflex analysis: which blood pressure signal should be used?

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    The baroreflex (BR) is an important physiological regulatory mechanism which reacts to blood pressure perturbations with reflex changes of target variables such as the heart period (electrocardiogram derived RR interval) or the peripheral vascular resistance (PVR). Evaluation of cardiac chronotropic (RR as a target variable) and vascular resistance (target PVR) BR arms was in previous studies mainly based on the use of the spontaneous variability of the systolic or diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), respectively, as the input signals. The use of other blood pressure measures such as the mean blood pressure (MBP) as an input signal for BR analysis is still under investigation. Making the assumption that the strength of coupling along the BR indicates the more appropriate input signal for baroreflex analysis, we employ partial spectral decomposition to assess in the frequency domain the causal coupling from SBP, MBP or DBP to RR or PVR. Noninvasive beat-to-beat recording of RR, SBP, MBP and DBP and PVR was performed in 39 and 36 volunteers in whom orthostatic and cognitive loads were evoked respectively through head-up tilt and mental arithmetic task. At rest, the MBP was most tightly coupled with RR, in contrast to the analysis of the vascular resistance BR arm where the results showed similar importance of all blood pressure input signals. During orthostasis, the increased importance of SBP as the input signal for BR analysis along the cardiac chronotropic arm was demonstrated. In addition, the gain from MBP to RR was more sensitive to physiological state changes compared to gains with SBP or DBP signal as inputs. We conclude that the coupling strength depends not only on the analysed baroreflex arm but also on the selection of the input blood pressure signal and the physiological state. The MBP signal should be more frequently used for the cardiac baroreflex analysis

    Повышение эффективности коррозионной защиты магистральных трубопроводов в грунтах с высокой коррозионной активностью

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    В работе изложен анализ существующих методов борьбы с коррозионными разрушениями трубопроводов в грунтах с высокой коррозионной активностью. В процессе исследования проводились: изучение теоретических основ процессов коррозионных разрушений; выявление факторов, оказывающих наибольшее влияние на возникновение коррозионных процессов; рассмотрение методов пассивной и активной защиты трубопроводов от коррозии. В результате исследования: произведен расчет электрохимической защиты. Область применения: линейная часть магистрального трубопровода.The article presents an analysis of existing methods for combating corrosion damage to pipelines in soils with increased corrosive activity. In the course of the research, the following were carried out: study of the theoretical foundations of corrosion destruction processes; identification of factors that have the greatest impact on the occurrence of corrosion processes; consideration of methods of passive and active protection of pipelines from corrosion. As a result of the research: the calculation of the electrochemical protection was made. Scope: linear part of the main pipeline

    Ultrathin compound semiconductor on insulator layers for high performance nanoscale transistors

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    Over the past several years, the inherent scaling limitations of electron devices have fueled the exploration of high carrier mobility semiconductors as a Si replacement to further enhance the device performance. In particular, compound semiconductors heterogeneously integrated on Si substrates have been actively studied, combining the high mobility of III-V semiconductors and the well-established, low cost processing of Si technology. This integration, however, presents significant challenges. Conventionally, heteroepitaxial growth of complex multilayers on Si has been explored. Besides complexity, high defect densities and junction leakage currents present limitations in the approach. Motivated by this challenge, here we utilize an epitaxial transfer method for the integration of ultrathin layers of single-crystalline InAs on Si/SiO2 substrates. As a parallel to silicon-on-insulator (SOI) technology14,we use the abbreviation "XOI" to represent our compound semiconductor-on-insulator platform. Through experiments and simulation, the electrical properties of InAs XOI transistors are explored, elucidating the critical role of quantum confinement in the transport properties of ultrathin XOI layers. Importantly, a high quality InAs/dielectric interface is obtained by the use of a novel thermally grown interfacial InAsOx layer (~1 nm thick). The fabricated FETs exhibit an impressive peak transconductance of ~1.6 mS/{\mu}m at VDS=0.5V with ON/OFF current ratio of greater than 10,000 and a subthreshold swing of 107-150 mV/decade for a channel length of ~0.5 {\mu}m

    Quantification of radial arterial pulse characteristics change during exercise and recovery

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    It is physiologically important to understand the arterial pulse waveform characteristics change during exercise and recovery. However, there is a lack of a comprehensive investigation. This study aimed to provide scientific evidence on the arterial pulse characteristics change during exercise and recovery. Sixty-five healthy subjects were studied. The exercise loads were gradually increased from 0 to 125 W for female subjects and to 150 W for male subjects. Radial pulses were digitally recorded during exercise and 4-min recovery. Four parameters were extracted from the raw arterial pulse waveform, including the pulse amplitude, width, pulse peak and dicrotic notch time. Five parameters were extracted from the normalized radial pulse waveform, including the pulse peak and dicrotic notch position, pulse Area, Area1 and Area2 separated by notch point. With increasing loads during exercise, the raw pulse amplitude increased significantly with decreased pulse period, reduced peak and notch time. From the normalized pulses, the pulse Area, pulse Area1 and Area2 decreased, respectively, from 38 ± 4, 61 ± 5 and 23 ± 5 at rest to 34 ± 4, 52 ± 6 and 13 ± 5 at 150-W exercise load. During recovery, an opposite trend was observed. This study quantitatively demonstrated significant changes of radial pulse characteristics during different exercise loads and recovery phases

    Cardiorespiratory Phase-Coupling Is Reduced in Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea

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    Cardiac and respiratory rhythms reveal transient phases of phase-locking which were proposed to be an important aspect of cardiorespiratory interaction. The aim of this study was to quantify cardio-respiratory phase-locking in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). We investigated overnight polysomnography data of 248 subjects with suspected OSA. Cardiorespiratory phase-coupling was computed from the R-R intervals of body surface ECG and respiratory rate, calculated from abdominal and thoracic sensors, using Hilbert transform. A significant reduction in phase-coupling was observed in patients with severe OSA compared to patients with no or mild OSA. Cardiorespiratory phase-coupling was also associated with sleep stages and was significantly reduced during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep compared to slow-wave (SW) sleep. There was, however, no effect of age and BMI on phase coupling. Our study suggests that the assessment of cardiorespiratory phase coupling may be used as an ECG based screening tool for determining the severity of OSA
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