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Utilizing temporal data abstraction for data validation and therapy planning for artificially ventilated newborn infants
- Source :
- Artificial Intelligence in Medicine. 8:543-576
- Publication Year :
- 1996
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 1996.
-
Abstract
- Medical diagnosis and therapy planning at modern intensive care units (ICUs) have been refined by the technical improvement of their equipment. However, the bulk of continuous data arising from complex monitoring systems in combination with discontinuously assessed numerical and qualitative data creates a rising information management problem at neonatal ICUs (NICUs). We developed methods for data validation and therapy planning which incorporate knowledge about point and interval data, as well as expected qualitative trend descriptions to arrive at unified qualitative descriptions of parameters (temporal data abstraction). Our methods are based on schemata for data-point transformation and curve fitting which express the dynamics of and the reactions to different degrees of parameters' abnormalities as well as on smoothing and adjustment mechanisms to keep the qualitative descriptions stable. We show their applicability in detecting anomalous system behavior early, in recommending therapeutic actions, and in assessing the effectiveness of these actions within a certain period. We implemented our methods in VIE-VENT, an open-loop knowledge-based monitoring and therapy planning system for artificially ventilated newborn infants. The applicability and usefulness of our approach are illustrated by examples of VIE-VENT. Finally, we present our first experiences with using VIE-VENT in a real clinical setting.
- Subjects :
- Information management
Time Factors
Computer science
Medicine (miscellaneous)
Data validation
Qualitative property
computer.software_genre
Patient Care Planning
Intermittent Positive-Pressure Ventilation
Positive-Pressure Respiration
Oxygen Consumption
Artificial Intelligence
Intensive care
Humans
Medical diagnosis
Monitoring, Physiologic
Abstraction (linguistics)
Respiration
Infant, Newborn
Reproducibility of Results
Carbon Dioxide
Respiration, Artificial
Temporal database
Oxygen
Data Interpretation, Statistical
Therapy, Computer-Assisted
Linear Models
Data mining
computer
Algorithms
Smoothing
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 09333657
- Volume :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Artificial Intelligence in Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....767a32f6b2781a097b7aa2d90fe7abe5