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1.
Physiol Meas ; 45(2)2024 Feb 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38306663

RESUMO

Objective. To develop analytical formulas which can serve as quantitative guidelines for the selection of the sampling rate for the electrocardiogram (ECG) required to calculate heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) with a desired level of accuracy.Approach. We developed analytical formulas which relate the ECG sampling rate to conservative bounds on HR and HRV errors: (i) one relating HR and sampling rate to a HR error bound and (ii) the others relating sampling rate to HRV error bounds (in terms of root-mean-square of successive differences (RMSSD) and standard deviation of normal sinus beats (SDNN)). We validated the formulas using experimental data collected from 58 young healthy volunteers which encompass a wide HR and HRV ranges through strenuous exercise.Main results. The results strongly supported the validity of the analytical formulas as well as their tightness. The formulas can be used to (i) predict an upper bound of inaccuracy in HR and HRV for a given sampling rate in conjunction with HR and HRV as well as to (ii) determine a sampling rate to achieve a desired accuracy requirement at a given HR or HRV (or its range).Significance. HR and its variability (HRV) derived from the ECG have been widely utilized in a wide range of research in physiology and psychophysiology. However, there is no established guideline for the selection of the sampling rate for the ECG required to calculate HR and HRV with a desired level of accuracy. Hence, the analytical formulas may guide in selecting sampling rates for the ECG tailored to various applications of HR and HRV.


Assuntos
Eletrocardiografia , Exercício Físico , Humanos , Frequência Cardíaca/fisiologia , Eletrocardiografia/métodos
2.
Biosensors (Basel) ; 14(2)2024 Jan 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38391980

RESUMO

Hypovolemic shock is one of the leading causes of death in the military. The current methods of assessing hypovolemia in field settings rely on a clinician assessment of vital signs, which is an unreliable assessment of hypovolemia severity. These methods often detect hypovolemia when interventional methods are ineffective. Therefore, there is a need to develop real-time sensing methods for the early detection of hypovolemia. Previously, our group developed a random-forest model that successfully estimated absolute blood-volume status (ABVS) from noninvasive wearable sensor data for a porcine model (n = 6). However, this model required normalizing ABVS data using individual baseline data, which may not be present in crisis situations where a wearable sensor might be placed on a patient by the attending clinician. We address this barrier by examining seven individual baseline-free normalization techniques. Using a feature-specific global mean from the ABVS and an external dataset for normalization demonstrated similar performance metrics compared to no normalization (normalization: R2 = 0.82 ± 0.025|0.80 ± 0.032, AUC = 0.86 ± 5.5 × 10-3|0.86 ± 0.013, RMSE = 28.30 ± 0.63%|27.68 ± 0.80%; no normalization: R2 = 0.81 ± 0.045, AUC = 0.86 ± 8.9 × 10-3, RMSE = 28.89 ± 0.84%). This demonstrates that normalization may not be required and develops a foundation for individual baseline-free ABVS prediction.


Assuntos
Hipovolemia , Sinais Vitais , Humanos , Suínos , Animais , Hipovolemia/diagnóstico , Hipovolemia/etiologia , Diagnóstico Precoce
3.
J Intensive Care Med ; : 8850666241226893, 2024 Jan 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38282376

RESUMO

Background: Published evidence indicates that mean arterial pressure (MAP) below a goal range (hypotension) is associated with worse outcomes, though MAP management failures are common. We sought to characterize hypotension occurrences in ICUs and consider the implications for MAP management. Methods: Retrospective analysis of 3 hospitals' cohorts of adult ICU patients during continuous vasopressor infusion. Two cohorts were general, mixed ICU patients and one was exclusively acute spinal cord injury patients. "Hypotension-clusters" were defined where there were ≥10 min of cumulative hypotension over a 60-min period and "constant hypotension" was ≥10 continuous minutes. Trend analysis was performed (predicting future MAP using 14 min of preceding MAP data) to understand which hypotension-clusters could likely have been predicted by clinician awareness of MAP trends. Results: In cohorts of 155, 66, and 16 ICU stays, respectively, the majority of hypotension occurred within the hypotension-clusters. Failures to keep MAP above the hypotension threshold were notable in the bottom quartiles of each cohort, with hypotension durations of 436, 167, and 468 min, respectively, occurring within hypotension-clusters per day. Mean arterial pressure trend analysis identified most hypotension-clusters before any constant hypotension occurred (81.2%-93.6% sensitivity, range). The positive predictive value of hypotension predictions ranged from 51.4% to 72.9%. Conclusions: Across 3 cohorts, most hypotension occurred in temporal clusters of hypotension that were usually predictable from extrapolation of MAP trends.

4.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 71(2): 477-483, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37610893

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To develop a novel physical model-based approach to enable 1-point calibration of pulse transit time (PTT) to blood pressure (BP). METHODS: The proposed PTT-BP calibration model is derived by combining the Bramwell-Hill equation and a phenomenological model of the arterial compliance (AC) curve. By imposing a physiologically plausible constraint on the skewness of AC at positive and negative transmural pressures, the number of tunable parameters in the PTT-BP calibration model reduces to 1. Hence, as opposed to most existing PTT-BP calibration models requiring multiple (≥2) PTT-BP measurements to personalize, the PTT-BP calibration model can be personalized to an individual subject using a single PTT-BP measurement pair. Equipped with the physically relevant PTT-AC and AC-BP relationships, the proposed approach may serve as a universal means to calibrate PTT to BP over a wide BP range. The validity and proof-of-concept of the proposed approach were evaluated using PTT and BP measurements collected from 22 healthy young volunteers undergoing large BP changes. RESULTS: The proposed approach modestly yet significantly outperformed an empiric linear PTT-BP calibration with a group-average slope and subject-specific intercept in terms of bias (5.5 mmHg vs 6.4 mmHg), precision (8.4 mmHg vs 9.4 mmHg), mean absolute error (7.8 mmHg vs 8.8 mmHg), and root-mean-squared error (8.7 mmHg vs 10.3 mmHg, all in the case of diastolic BP). CONCLUSION: We demonstrated the preliminary proof-of-concept of an innovative physical model-based approach to one-point PTT-BP calibration. SIGNIFICANCE: The proposed physical model-based approach has the potential to enable more accurate and convenient calibration of PTT to BP.


Assuntos
Artérias , Determinação da Pressão Arterial , Humanos , Pressão Sanguínea/fisiologia , Calibragem , Análise de Onda de Pulso
5.
Comput Biol Med ; 168: 107813, 2024 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38086141

RESUMO

This paper intends to investigate the feasibility of peripheral artery disease (PAD) diagnosis based on the analysis of non-invasive arterial pulse waveforms. We generated realistic synthetic arterial blood pressure (BP) and pulse volume recording (PVR) waveform signals pertaining to PAD present at the abdominal aorta with a wide range of severity levels using a mathematical model that simulates arterial blood circulation and arterial BP-PVR relationships. We developed a deep learning (DL)-enabled algorithm that can diagnose PAD by analyzing brachial and tibial PVR waveforms, and evaluated its efficacy in comparison with the same DL-enabled algorithm based on brachial and tibial arterial BP waveforms as well as the ankle-brachial index (ABI). The results suggested that it is possible to detect PAD based on DL-enabled PVR waveform analysis with adequate accuracy, and its detection efficacy is close to when arterial BP is used (positive and negative predictive values at 40 % abdominal aorta occlusion: 0.78 vs 0.89 and 0.85 vs 0.94; area under the ROC curve (AUC): 0.90 vs 0.97). On the other hand, its efficacy in estimating PAD severity level is not as good as when arterial BP is used (r value: 0.77 vs 0.93; Bland-Altman limits of agreement: -32%-+32 % vs -20%-+19 %). In addition, DL-enabled PVR waveform analysis significantly outperformed ABI in both detection and severity estimation. In sum, the findings from this paper suggest the potential of DL-enabled non-invasive arterial pulse waveform analysis as an affordable and non-invasive means for PAD diagnosis.


Assuntos
Aprendizado Profundo , Doença Arterial Periférica , Humanos , Doença Arterial Periférica/diagnóstico , Índice Tornozelo-Braço , Pressão Sanguínea , Valor Preditivo dos Testes
6.
Sensors (Basel) ; 23(23)2023 Nov 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38067755

RESUMO

This paper describes a signal quality classification method for arm ballistocardiogram (BCG), which has the potential for non-invasive and continuous blood pressure measurement. An advantage of the BCG signal for wearable devices is that it can easily be measured using accelerometers. However, the BCG signal is also susceptible to noise caused by motion artifacts. This distortion leads to errors in blood pressure estimation, thereby lowering the performance of blood pressure measurement based on BCG. In this study, to prevent such performance degradation, a binary classification model was created to distinguish between high-quality versus low-quality BCG signals. To estimate the most accurate model, four time-series imaging methods (recurrence plot, the Gramain angular summation field, the Gramain angular difference field, and the Markov transition field) were studied to convert the temporal BCG signal associated with each heartbeat into a 448 × 448 pixel image, and the image was classified using CNN models such as ResNet, SqueezeNet, DenseNet, and LeNet. A total of 9626 BCG beats were used for training, validation, and testing. The experimental results showed that the ResNet and SqueezeNet models with the Gramain angular difference field method achieved a binary classification accuracy of up to 87.5%.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Balistocardiografia , Balistocardiografia/métodos , Frequência Cardíaca/fisiologia , Artefatos , Movimento (Física)
7.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38083108

RESUMO

Millions around the world suffer from traumatic stress (stress caused by traumatic memories). Transcutaneous cervical vagus nerve stimulation (tcVNS) has been shown to counteract physiological changes associated with traumatic stress. However, little is known regarding the approximate timecourse of tcVNS effects. This knowledge of how quickly tcVNS takes effect is needed to optimize closed-loop tcVNS systems that can mitigate traumatic stress in a timely manner. To address this gap, we studied N=26 participants with history of prior trauma. Participants wore electrocardiogram, photoplethysmogram, seismocardiogram, and respiratory effort sensors throughout a double-blind protocol involving traumatic stress and active tcVNS (n=12) or sham stimulation (n=14). From the physiological signals, we extracted cardiovascular and respiratory markers and studied their dynamics during the traumatic stress and stimulation conditions. We decoupled the short-term transient responses from longer-term cumulative changes by centering each condition's response with respect to data immediately prior to the condition. We thereby elucidate a diverse set of transient physiological responses to tcVNS and traumatic stress. These responses demonstrate that tcVNS-induced changes occur within seconds and have the potential to reduce acute physiological manifestations of traumatic stress.Clinical relevance- Traumatic stress can overpower an individual within seconds and often occurs outside the clinic. This analysis focuses on transient physiological responses to traumatic memories and tcVNS captured using multimodal physiological sensing. We demonstrate that tcVNS-induced changes occur within seconds and have the potential to mitigate some of the short-term effects of traumatic stress.


Assuntos
Pescoço , Nervo Vago , Humanos , Nervo Vago/fisiologia , Ansiedade , Coração , Biomarcadores
8.
Front Neurosci ; 17: 1213982, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37746156

RESUMO

Stress is a major determinant of health and wellbeing. Conventional stress management approaches do not account for the daily-living acute changes in stress that affect quality of life. The combination of physiological monitoring and non-invasive Peripheral Nerve Stimulation (PNS) represents a promising technological approach to quantify stress-induced physiological manifestations and reduce stress during everyday life. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of three well-established transcutaneous PNS modalities in reducing physiological manifestations of stress compared to a sham: auricular and cervical Vagus Nerve Stimulation (taVNS and tcVNS), and Median Nerve Stimulation (tMNS). Using a single-blind sham-controlled crossover study with four visits, we compared the stress mitigation effectiveness of taVNS, tcVNS, and tMNS, quantified through physiological markers derived from five physiological signals peripherally measured on 19 young healthy volunteers. Participants underwent three acute mental and physiological stressors while receiving stimulation. Blinding effectiveness was assessed via subjective survey. taVNS and tMNS relative to sham resulted in significant changes that suggest a reduction in sympathetic outflow following the acute stressors: Left Ventricular Ejection Time Index (LVETI) shortening (tMNS: p = 0.007, taVNS: p = 0.015) and Pre-Ejection Period (PEP)-to-LVET ratio (PEP/LVET) increase (tMNS: p = 0.044, taVNS: p = 0.029). tMNS relative to sham also reduced Pulse Pressure (PP; p = 0.032) and tonic EDA activity (tonicMean; p = 0.025). The nonsignificant blinding survey results suggest these effects were not influenced by placebo. taVNS and tMNS effectively reduced stress-induced sympathetic arousal in wearable-compatible physiological signals, motivating their future use in novel personalized stress therapies to improve quality of life.

9.
J Hypertens ; 41(12): 2074-2087, 2023 12 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37303198

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: There is intense effort to develop cuffless blood pressure (BP) measuring devices, and several are already on the market claiming that they provide accurate measurements. These devices are heterogeneous in measurement principle, intended use, functions, and calibration, and have special accuracy issues requiring different validation than classic cuff BP monitors. To date, there are no generally accepted protocols for their validation to ensure adequate accuracy for clinical use. OBJECTIVE: This statement by the European Society of Hypertension (ESH) Working Group on BP Monitoring and Cardiovascular Variability recommends procedures for validating intermittent cuffless BP devices (providing measurements every >30 sec and usually 30-60 min, or upon user initiation), which are most common. VALIDATION PROCEDURES: Six validation tests are defined for evaluating different aspects of intermittent cuffless devices: static test (absolute BP accuracy); device position test (hydrostatic pressure effect robustness); treatment test (BP decrease accuracy); awake/asleep test (BP change accuracy); exercise test (BP increase accuracy); and recalibration test (cuff calibration stability over time). Not all these tests are required for a given device. The necessary tests depend on whether the device requires individual user calibration, measures automatically or manually, and takes measurements in more than one position. CONCLUSION: The validation of cuffless BP devices is complex and needs to be tailored according to their functions and calibration. These ESH recommendations present specific, clinically meaningful, and pragmatic validation procedures for different types of intermittent cuffless devices to ensure that only accurate devices will be used in the evaluation and management of hypertension.


Assuntos
Determinação da Pressão Arterial , Hipertensão , Humanos , Pressão Sanguínea/fisiologia , Hipertensão/diagnóstico , Esfigmomanômetros , Monitores de Pressão Arterial
10.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 70(8): 2298-2309, 2023 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37022451

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To present the population-informed particle filter (PIPF), a novel filtering approach that incorporates past experiences with patients into the filtering process to provide reliable beliefs about a new patient's physiological state. METHODS: To derive the PIPF, we formulate the filtering problem as recursive inference on a probabilistic graphical model, which includes representations for the pertinent physiological dynamics and the hierarchical relationship between past and present patient characteristics. Then, we provide an algorithmic solution to the filtering problem using Sequential Monte-Carlo techniques. To demonstrate the merits of the PIPF approach, we apply it to a case study of physiological monitoring for hemodynamic management. RESULTS: The PIPF approach could provide reliable beliefs about the likely values and uncertainties associated with a patient's unmeasured physiological variables (e.g., hematocrit and cardiac output), characteristics (e.g., tendency for atypical behavior), and events (e.g., hemorrhage) given low-information measurements. CONCLUSION: The PIPF shows promise in the presented case study, and may have applications to a wider range of real-time monitoring problems with limited measurements. SIGNIFICANCE: Forming reliable beliefs about a patient's physiological state is an essential aspect of algorithmic decision-making in medical care settings. Hence, the PIPF may serve as a solid basis for designing interpretable and context-aware physiological monitoring, medical decision-support, and closed-loop control algorithms.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Modelos Estatísticos , Humanos , Monitorização Fisiológica , Incerteza
11.
J Burn Care Res ; 44(3): 599-609, 2023 05 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35809084

RESUMO

While urinary output (UOP) remains the primary endpoint for titration of intravenous fluid resuscitation, it is an insufficient indicator of fluid responsiveness. Although advanced hemodynamic monitoring (including arterial pulse wave analysis [PWA]) is of recent interest, the validity of PWA-derived indices in burn resuscitation extremes has not been established. The goal of this paper is to test the hypothesis that PWA-derived cardiac output (CO) and stroke volume (SV) indices as well as pulse pressure variation (PPV) and systolic pressure variation (SPV) can play a complementary role to UOP in burn resuscitation. Swine were instrumented with a Swan-Ganz catheter for reference CO and underwent a 40% TBSA burns with varying resuscitation paradigms, and were monitored for 24 hours in an ICU setting under mechanical ventilation. The longitudinal changes in PWA-derived indices were investigated, and resuscitation adequacy was compared as determined by UOP vs PWA indices. The results indicated that PWA-derived indices exhibited trends consistent with reference CO and SV measurements: CO and SV indices were proportional to reference CO and SV, respectively (CO: postcalibration limits of agreement [LoA] = ±24.7 [ml/min/kg], SV: postcalibration LoA = ±0.30 [ml/kg]) while PPV and SPV were inversely proportional to reference SV (PPV: postcalibration LoA = ±0.32 [ml/kg], SPV: postcalibration LoA = ±0.31 [ml/kg]). The results also indicated that PWA-derived indices exhibited notable discrepancies from UOP in determining adequate burn resuscitation. Hence, it was concluded that the PWA-derived indices may have complementary value to UOP in assessing and guiding burn resuscitation.


Assuntos
Queimaduras , Animais , Suínos , Queimaduras/terapia , Pressão Sanguínea , Respiração Artificial , Artérias , Ressuscitação/métodos , Hidratação/métodos , Análise de Onda de Pulso , Hemodinâmica
12.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 70(2): 715-722, 2023 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36006885

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Oscillogram modeling is a powerful tool for understanding and advancing popular oscillometric blood pressure (BP) measurement. A reduced oscillogram model relating cuff pressure oscillation amplitude ( ∆O) to external cuff pressure of the artery ( Pe) is: [Formula: see text], where g(P) is the arterial compliance versus transmural pressure ( P) curve, Ps and Pd are systolic and diastolic BP, and k is the reciprocal of the cuff compliance. The objective was to determine an optimal functional form for the arterial compliance curve. METHODS: Eight prospective, three-parameter functions of the brachial artery compliance curve were compared. The study data included oscillometric arm cuff pressure waveforms and invasive brachial BP from 122 patients covering a 20-120 mmHg pulse pressure range. The oscillogram measurements were constructed from the cuff pressure waveforms. Reduced oscillogram models, inputted with measured systolic and diastolic BP and each parametric brachial artery compliance curve function, were optimally fitted to the oscillogram measurements in the least squares sense. RESULTS: An exponential-linear function yielded as good or better model fits compared to the other functions, with errors of 7.9±0.3 and 5.1±0.2% for tail-trimmed and lower half-trimmed oscillogram measurements. Importantly, this function was also the most tractable mathematically. CONCLUSION: A three-parameter exponential-linear function is an optimal form for the arterial compliance curve in the reduced oscillogram model and may thus serve as the standard function for this model henceforth. SIGNIFICANCE: The complete, reduced oscillogram model determined herein can potentially improve oscillometric BP measurement accuracy while advancing foundational knowledge.


Assuntos
Pressão Arterial , Determinação da Pressão Arterial , Humanos , Pressão Sanguínea/fisiologia , Estudos Prospectivos , Artéria Braquial/fisiologia
13.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 70(5): 1565-1574, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36383592

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To develop a high-fidelity mathematical model intended to replicate the cardiovascular (CV) responses of a critically ill patient to vasoplegic shock-induced hypotension and vasopressor therapy. METHODS: The mathematical model consists of a lumped-parameter CV physiology model with baroreflex modulation feedback and a phenomenological dynamic dose-response model of a vasopressor. The adequacy of the proposed mathematical model was investigated using an experimental dataset acquired from 10 pigs receiving phenylephrine (PHP) therapy after vasoplegic shock induced via sodium nitroprusside (SNP). RESULTS: Upon calibration, the mathematical model could (i) faithfully replicate the effects of PHP on dynamic changes in blood pressure (BP), cardiac output (CO), and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) (root-mean-squared errors between measured and calibrated mathematical responses: mean arterial BP 2.5+/-1.0 mmHg, CO 0.2+/-0.1 lpm, SVR 2.4+/-1.5 mmHg/lpm; r value: mean arterial BP 0.96+/-0.01, CO 0.65+/-0.45, TPR 0.92+/-0.10) and (ii) predict physiologically plausible behaviors of unmeasured internal CV variables as well as secondary baroreflex modulation effects. CONCLUSION: This mathematical model is perhaps the first of its kind that can comprehensively replicate both primary (i.e., direct) and secondary (i.e., baroreflex modulation) effects of a vasopressor drug on an array of CV variables, rendering it ideally suited to pre-clinical virtual evaluation of the safety and efficacy of closed-loop control algorithms for autonomous vasopressor administration once it is extensively validated. SIGNIFICANCE: This mathematical model architecture incorporating both direct and baroreflex modulation effects may generalize to serve as part of an effective platform for high-fidelity in silico simulation of CV responses to vasopressors during vasoplegic shock.


Assuntos
Barorreflexo , Vasoconstritores , Animais , Suínos , Pressão Sanguínea/fisiologia , Vasoconstritores/farmacologia , Barorreflexo/fisiologia , Simulação por Computador , Modelos Cardiovasculares
14.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 21463, 2022 12 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36509856

RESUMO

Physiological closed-loop controlled (PCLC) medical devices monitor and automatically adjust the patient's condition by using physiological variables as feedback, ideally with minimal human intervention to achieve the target levels set by a clinician. PCLC devices present a challenge when it comes to evaluating their performance, where conducting large clinical trials can be expensive. Virtual physiological patients simulated by validated mathematical models can be utilized to obtain pre-clinical evidence of safety and assess the performance of the PCLC medical device during normal and worst-case conditions that are unlikely to happen in a limited clinical trial. A physiological variable that plays a major role during fluid resuscitation is heart rate (HR). For in silico assessment of PCLC medical devices regarding fluid perturbation, there is currently no mathematical model of HR validated in terms of its predictive capability performance. This paper develops and validates a mathematical model of HR response using data collected from sheep subjects undergoing hemorrhage and fluid infusion. The model proved to be accurate in estimating the HR response to fluid perturbation, where averaged between 21 calibration datasets, the fitting performance showed a normalized root mean square error (NRMSE) of [Formula: see text]. The model was also evaluated in terms of model predictive capability performance via a leave-one-out procedure (21 subjects) and an independent validation dataset (6 subjects). Two different virtual cohort generation tools were used in each validation analysis. The generated envelope of virtual subjects robustly met the defined acceptance criteria, in which [Formula: see text] of the testing datasets presented simulated HR patterns that were within a deviation of 50% from the observed data. In addition, out of 16000 and 18522 simulated subjects for the leave-one-out and independent datasets, the model was able to generate at least one virtual subject that was close to the real subject within an error margin of [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] NRMSE, respectively. In conclusion, the model can generate valid virtual HR physiological responses to fluid perturbation and be incorporated into future non-clinical simulated testing setups for assessing PCLC devices intended for fluid resuscitation.


Assuntos
Frequência Cardíaca , Humanos , Ovinos , Animais , Frequência Cardíaca/fisiologia
15.
NPJ Digit Med ; 5(1): 168, 2022 Nov 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36329099

RESUMO

Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) are lethal but treatable yet substantially under-diagnosed and under-monitored. Hence, new AAA monitoring devices that are convenient in use and cost are needed. Our hypothesis is that analysis of arterial waveforms, which could be obtained with such a device, can provide information about AAA size. We aim to initially test this hypothesis via tonometric waveforms. We study noninvasive carotid and femoral blood pressure (BP) waveforms and reference image-based maximal aortic diameter measurements from 50 AAA patients as well as the two noninvasive BP waveforms from these patients after endovascular repair (EVAR) and from 50 comparable control patients. We develop linear regression models for predicting the maximal aortic diameter from waveform or non-waveform features. We evaluate the models in out-of-training data in terms of predicting the maximal aortic diameter value and changes induced by EVAR. The best model includes the carotid area ratio (diastolic area divided by systolic area) and normalized carotid-femoral pulse transit time ((age·diastolic BP)/(height/PTT)) as input features with positive model coefficients. This model is explainable based on the early, negative wave reflection in AAA and the Moens-Korteweg equation for relating PTT to vessel diameter. The predicted maximal aortic diameters yield receiver operating characteristic area under the curves of 0.83 ± 0.04 in classifying AAA versus control patients and 0.72 ± 0.04 in classifying AAA patients before versus after EVAR. These results are significantly better than a baseline model excluding waveform features as input. Our findings could potentially translate to convenient devices that serve as an adjunct to imaging.

16.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2022: 1406-1409, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36085671

RESUMO

We investigated whether a statistical model used previously to predict hypotension from mean arterial pressure (MAP) time series analysis could predict hypertension. We performed a retrospective analysis of minute-by-minute MAP records from two cohorts of intensive care unit (ICU) patients. The first cohort was comprised of surgical and medical ICUs while the second cohort was comprised of acute spinal cord injury (ASCI) patients in a neurological ICU. At each time point with physiological MAP, time series analysis was used to predict the median MAP for the subsequent 20 min. This method was used to predict hypertensive episodes, i.e., intervals of 20 or more minutes where at least half of the MAP measurements were > 105 mmHg. Advance prediction of hypertensive episodes was similar in the two cohorts (69.15% vs. 82.61%, respectively), as was positive predictive value of the hypertension predictions (67.42% vs. 71.57%). The results suggest that the methodology may be useable for predicting hypertension from time-series analysis of MAP. Patients requiring continuous vasopressor infusion are at risk of hypertension and excessive vasoconstriction. We found evidence that time-series analysis previously validated for predicting hypotension may also be usable for predicting hypertension.


Assuntos
Hipertensão , Hipotensão , Pressão Arterial , Humanos , Hipertensão/diagnóstico , Hipotensão/diagnóstico , Projetos de Pesquisa , Estudos Retrospectivos
17.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2022: 1149-1151, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36086441

RESUMO

There have been decades of interest in advanced computational algorithms with potential for clinical decision support systems (CDSS), yet these have not been widely implemented in clinical practice. One major barrier to dissemination may be a user-friendly interface that integrates into clinical workflows. Complicated or non-intuitive displays may confuse users and may even increase patient management errors. We recently developed a graphical user interface (GUI) intended to integrate a predictive hemodynamic model into the workflow of nurses caring for patients on vasopressors in the intensive care unit (ICU). Here, we evaluated user perceptions of the usability of this system. The software was installed in the room of an ICU patient, running for at least 4 hours with the display hidden. Afterward, we showed nurses a video recording of the session and surveyed their perceptions about the software's potential safety and usefulness. We collected data for nine patients. Overall, nurses expressed reasonable enthusiasm that the software would be useful and without serious safety concerns. However, there was a wide diversity of opinions about what specific aspects of the software would be useful and what aspects were confusing. In several instances, the same elements of the GUI were cited as most useful by some nurses and most confusing by others. Our findings validate that it is possible to develop GUIs for CDSS that are perceived as potentially useful and without substantial risk but also reinforce the diversity of user perceptions about novel CDSS technology. Clinical Relevance- This end-user evaluation of a novel CDSS highlights the importance of end-user experience in the workflow integration of advanced computational algorithms for bedside decision support during critical care.


Assuntos
Sistemas de Apoio a Decisões Clínicas , Algoritmos , Humanos , Unidades de Terapia Intensiva , Software , Fluxo de Trabalho
19.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(4)2022 Feb 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35214238

RESUMO

This paper presents a novel computational algorithm to estimate blood volume decompensation state based on machine learning (ML) analysis of multi-modal wearable-compatible physiological signals. To the best of our knowledge, our algorithm may be the first of its kind which can not only discriminate normovolemia from hypovolemia but also classify hypovolemia into absolute hypovolemia and relative hypovolemia. We realized our blood volume classification algorithm by (i) extracting a multitude of features from multi-modal physiological signals including the electrocardiogram (ECG), the seismocardiogram (SCG), the ballistocardiogram (BCG), and the photoplethysmogram (PPG), (ii) constructing two ML classifiers using the features, one to classify normovolemia vs. hypovolemia and the other to classify hypovolemia into absolute hypovolemia and relative hypovolemia, and (iii) sequentially integrating the two to enable multi-class classification (normovolemia, absolute hypovolemia, and relative hypovolemia). We developed the blood volume decompensation state classification algorithm using the experimental data collected from six animals undergoing normovolemia, relative hypovolemia, and absolute hypovolemia challenges. Leave-one-subject-out analysis showed that our classification algorithm achieved an F1 score and accuracy of (i) 0.93 and 0.89 in classifying normovolemia vs. hypovolemia, (ii) 0.88 and 0.89 in classifying hypovolemia into absolute hypovolemia and relative hypovolemia, and (iii) 0.77 and 0.81 in classifying the overall blood volume decompensation state. The analysis of the features embedded in the ML classifiers indicated that many features are physiologically plausible, and that multi-modal SCG-BCG fusion may play an important role in achieving good blood volume classification efficacy. Our work may complement existing computational algorithms to estimate blood volume compensatory reserve as a potential decision-support tool to provide guidance on context-sensitive hypovolemia therapeutic strategy.


Assuntos
Hemorragia , Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis , Algoritmos , Animais , Volume Sanguíneo/fisiologia , Hipovolemia/diagnóstico , Aprendizado de Máquina
20.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 69(6): 2087-2093, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34919515

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Many calibration models for cuff-less blood pressure (BP) measurement must be periodically updated with cuff BP values to account for vascular aging. However, the time period required for these "cuff re-calibrations" is largely unknown. The impact of one year of aging on several calibration models was assessed. METHODS: Ten humans (6 males, 57±18 years, 3 hypertensives) were studied during multiple recording sessions that occurred one year apart. In each session, electrocardiography (ECG), ear photoplethysmography (PPG), finger PPG, and toe PPG waveforms and manual cuff BP were recorded before and after slow breathing, mental arithmetic, cold pressor, and nitroglycerin. Linear models based on each PPG waveform, which were previously shown to offer value in predicting the intervention-induced BP changes in a larger subject cohort, were employed. The model coefficients were determined for each subject via one session, and the fully-defined, subject-specific calibration models were then evaluated in the corresponding subjects via the session one year later. RESULTS: Only a linear model relating toe pulse arrival time (PAT) - time delay between ECG R-wave and toe PPG foot - to systolic BP (SBP) remained useful. After the year, this model changed little on average (root-mean-squared-error (RMSE) = 1.5 mmHg) and predicted the cuff BP values better than the average of the initial cuff BP values of the subject (RMSE = 9.6±0.8 mmHg vs. 12.7±1.0 mmHg; p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: These results suggest annual cuff recalibrations for the toe PAT-SBP model. SIGNIFICANCE: Toe PAT may offer a practical recalibration period that fosters user adherence.


Assuntos
Determinação da Pressão Arterial , Análise de Onda de Pulso , Envelhecimento , Pressão Sanguínea/fisiologia , Determinação da Pressão Arterial/métodos , Calibragem , Humanos , Masculino , Fotopletismografia/métodos , Análise de Onda de Pulso/métodos
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