| Literature DB >> 29739438 |
C Muszynski1,2, T Happillon3, K Azudin3, J-B Tylcz3, D Istrate3, C Marque3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preterm birth is a major public health problem in developed countries. In this context, we have conducted research into outpatient monitoring of uterine electrical activity in women at risk of preterm delivery. The objective of this preliminary study was to perform automated detection of uterine contractions (without human intervention or tocographic signal, TOCO) by processing the EHG recorded on the abdomen of pregnant women. The feasibility and accuracy of uterine contraction detection based on EHG processing were tested and compared to expert decision using external tocodynamometry (TOCO) .Entities:
Keywords: Automated contraction detection; Electrohysterogram; Premature delivery; Uterine contraction
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29739438 PMCID: PMC5941683 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-018-1778-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1a Positioning of the 16 electrodes (Ei, i ϵ [1–16]) according to a 4 × 4 matrix. This matrix is shifted slightly towards the right due to the physiological dextrorotation of the uterus. b Twelve bipolar signals are obtained (Vbi, i ϵ [1–12]) by vertical subtraction of 2 adjacent unipolar signals
Fig. 2Real-time EHG analysis by application of the nonlinear correlation coefficient H2 to two adjacent bipolar signals. The analysis on the left concerns an EHG segment with no contractions (bottom line) associated with a poor correlation between the signals (H2 = 0.18). The analysis on the right concerns an EHG segment during a contraction associated with a strong correlation between the signals (H2 = 0.9)
Fig. 3a In red: electrical activity associated with a contraction previously identified on concomitant tocography (reference contraction). b Curve of calculated H2 values and the cutoff adopted beyond which an event is validated. c Detected events: all contractions were fully or partly detected (green), but some detected events do not correspond to contractions and were considered to be false alarms (gray)
Fig. 4Fully detected contraction (green): contraction, for which the segment detected by the algorithm corresponds (which a short time difference) to the limits indicated by the experts; Partial detection (light grey): detection of only a part of the contraction, or comprising noise in the detected segment; False alarm (dark grey): an event that is detected but does not correspond to any reference contraction
Results of automated detection of uterine contractions by analysis based on the nonlinear correlation coefficient H2 alone. The database used contains 501 labelled contractions
| Full detections | Partial detections | Total detections | False alarms |
|---|---|---|---|
| 62.5% (313/501) | 37.5% (188/501) | 100% (501/501) | 782% (3918/ 501) |
Results of automated detection of uterine contractions after the addition of fusion and elimination steps. The database used contains 501 labelled contractions
| Full detections | Partial detections | Total detections | False alarms |
|---|---|---|---|
| 63% (316/501) | 30.7% (154/501) | 92.6% (464/501) | 92.6% (464/ 501) |