Literature DB >> 22902971

Robust classification of neonatal apnoea-related desaturations.

Violeta Monasterio1, Fred Burgess, Gari D Clifford.   

Abstract

Respiratory signals monitored in the neonatal intensive care units are usually ignored due to the high prevalence of noise and false alarms (FA). Apneic events are generally therefore indicated by a pulse oximeter alarm reacting to the subsequent desaturation. However, the high FA rate in the photoplethysmogram may desensitize staff, reducing the reaction speed. The main reason for the high FA rates of critical care monitors is the unimodal analysis behaviour. In this work, we propose a multimodal analysis framework to reduce the FA rate in neonatal apnoea monitoring. Information about oxygen saturation, heart rate, respiratory rate and signal quality was extracted from electrocardiogram, impedance pneumogram and photoplethysmographic signals for a total of 20 features in the 5 min interval before a desaturation event. 1616 desaturation events from 27 neonatal admissions were annotated by two independent reviewers as true (physiologically relevant) or false (noise-related). Patients were divided into two independent groups for training and validation, and a support vector machine was trained to classify the events as true or false. The best classification performance was achieved on a combination of 13 features with sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of 100% in the training set, and a sensitivity of 86%, a specificity of 91% and an accuracy of 90% in the validation set.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22902971     DOI: 10.1088/0967-3334/33/9/1503

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Meas        ISSN: 0967-3334            Impact factor:   2.833


  3 in total

Review 1.  A review of signals used in sleep analysis.

Authors:  A Roebuck; V Monasterio; E Gederi; M Osipov; J Behar; A Malhotra; T Penzel; G D Clifford
Journal:  Physiol Meas       Date:  2013-12-17       Impact factor: 2.833

2.  Heart rate-based window segmentation improves accuracy of classifying posttraumatic stress disorder using heart rate variability measures.

Authors:  Erik Reinertsen; Shamim Nemati; Adriana N Vest; Viola Vaccarino; Rachel Lampert; Amit J Shah; Gari D Clifford
Journal:  Physiol Meas       Date:  2017-05-10       Impact factor: 2.833

3.  Alarms, oxygen saturations, and SpO2 averaging time in the NICU.

Authors:  C McClure; S Young Jang; K Fairchild
Journal:  J Neonatal Perinatal Med       Date:  2016
  3 in total

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