Back to Search
Start Over
Automated Off-Line Respiratory Event Detection for the Study of Postoperative Apnea in Infants
- Source :
- IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering. 58:1724-1733
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2011.
-
Abstract
- Previously, we presented automated methods for thoraco-abdominal asynchrony estimation and movement artifact detection in respiratory inductance plethysmography (RIP) signals. This paper combines and improves these methods to give a method for the automated, off-line detection of pause, movement artifact, and asynchrony. Simulation studies demonstrated that the new combined method is accurate and robust in the presence of noise. The new procedure was successfully applied to cardiorespiratory signals acquired postoperatively from infants in the recovery room. A comparison of the events detected with the automated method to those visually scored by an expert clinician demonstrated a higher agreement (κ = 0.52) than that amongst several human scorers (κ = 0.31) in a clinical study . The method provides the following advantages: first, it is fully automated; second, it is more efficient than visual scoring; third, the analysis is repeatable and standardized; fourth, it provides greater agreement with an expert scorer compared to the agreement between trained scorers; fifth, it is amenable to online detection; and lastly, it is applicable to uncalibrated RIP signals. Examples of applications include respiratory monitoring of postsurgical patients and sleep studies.
- Subjects :
- Apnea
Movement
Biomedical Engineering
Respiratory monitoring
Pattern Recognition, Automated
Postoperative Complications
Signal-to-noise ratio
medicine
Humans
Respiratory inductance plethysmography
Computer Simulation
Monitoring, Physiologic
Artifact (error)
business.industry
Respiration
Infant, Newborn
Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
Pattern recognition
Neurophysiology
Asynchrony (computer programming)
Plethysmography
Anesthesia
Artificial intelligence
Noise (video)
medicine.symptom
Artifacts
business
Algorithms
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15582531 and 00189294
- Volume :
- 58
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....28e025a7b126f7c6e6e9c828ec573aeb
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1109/tbme.2011.2112657