| Literature DB >> 30513934 |
Xuhao Du1, Gary Allwood2, Katherine Mary Webberley3, Adam Osseiran4, Barry J Marshall5.
Abstract
Interpretation of bowel sounds (BS) provides a convenient and non-invasive technique to aid in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal (GI) conditions. However, the approach's potential is limited by variation between BS and their irregular occurrence. A short, manual auscultation is sufficient to aid in diagnosis of only a few conditions. A longer recording has the potential to unlock additional understanding of GI physiology and clinical utility. In this paper, a low-cost and straightforward piezoelectric acoustic sensing device was designed and used for long BS recordings. The migrating motor complex (MMC) cycle was detected using this device and the sound index as the biomarker for MMC phases. This cycle of recurring motility is typically measured using expensive and invasive equipment. We also used our recordings to develop an improved categorization system for BS. Five different types of BS were extracted: the single burst, multiple bursts, continuous random sound, harmonic sound, and their combination. Their acoustic characteristics and distribution are described. The quantities of different BS during two-hour recordings varied considerably from person to person, while the proportions of different types were consistent. The sensing devices provide a useful tool for MMC detection and study of GI physiology and function.Entities:
Keywords: bowel sound; migrating motor complex; piezoelectric; quantity proportion
Year: 2018 PMID: 30513934 PMCID: PMC6308494 DOI: 10.3390/s18124240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1(a) Decomposition of the real sensor and (b) its corresponding consistence including the top lid, housing, foam, piezoelectric disk, and the membrane.
Figure 2An example of the (a) single burst; (b) multiple bursts; (c) random continued sound; (d) harmonic sound; and (e) combination sound in time domain (top) and its corresponding spectrogram (bottom).
The quantities and their corresponding proportion of different types of BS of 10 participants.
| Participant No. | Gender | BMI | SB | MB | CRS | HS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | female | 36.7 | ~800 (86.4%) | 82 (8.9%) | 27(2.9%) | 13 (1.3%) |
| 2 | male | 38.1 | ~900 (89.9%) | 65 (6.5%) | 28 (2.8%) | 6 (0.6%) |
| 3 | female | 29.4 | ~3900 (96.8%) | 74 (1.8%) | 44 (1.1%) | 4 (0.01%) |
| 4 | female | 21.9 | ~2200 (84.1%) | 354 (9.4%) | 141 (5.4%) | 11 (0.4%) |
| 5 | male | 19.1 | ~1400 (76.7%) | 245 (13.4%) | 142 (7.8%) | 23 (1.3%) |
| 6 | female | 37.6 | ~2000 (88.0%) | 151 (6.6%) | 98 (4.3%) | 13 (0.6%) |
| 7 | male | 26.0 | ~3900 (89.5%) | 208 (4.8%) | 153 (3.5%) | 77 (1.7%) |
| 8 | female | 27.6 | ~250 (93.6%) | 11 (4.1%) | 4 (1.5%) | 2 (0.7%) |
| 9 | female | 22.8 | ~3900 (82.6%) | 590 (12.5%) | 149 (3.2%) | 47 (1.0%) |
| 10 | female | 28.4 | ~4500 (89.3%) | 457 (9.1%) | 50 (1.0%) | 18 (0.4%) |
| Mean | 28.8 | 2375.0 (87.8%) | 223.7 (7.8%) | 83.6 (3.5%) | 21.4 (0.9%) | |
| SD 1 | 6.4 | 1476.0 (5.4%) | 180.1 (3.5%) | 56.0(2.0%) | 22.2 (0.5%) | |
| CV 2 | 0.22 | 0.62 (0.06) | 0.80 (0.45) | 0.67 (0.57) | 1.04 (0.56) |
1 Standard Deviation; 2 Coefficient of Variation ().
The acoustics features’ distributions of different types of BS.
| Type | Duration (ms) | Spectral Bandwidth (Hz) | Spectral Flatness | Mean-Crossing Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SB | 26–42 | 283.7–710.9 | 0.1207–0.2585 | 0.3221–0.4059 |
| MB | 56–445.8 | 358.5–995.8 | 0.1647–0.3477 | 0.3681–0.4411 |
| CRS | 215–674 | 151.5–419.7 | 0.06818–0.2007 | 0.2096–0.3867 |
| HS | 124–385 | 145.6–438.1 | 0.07096–0.2272 | 0.1211–0.3493 |
Figure 3Normalized distribution (area under curve equals to one) of acoustics characteristics of four types of BS including (a) duration; (b) mean-cross ratio; (c) spectral bandwidth; and (d) spectral flatness.
Figure 4The scaled sound index of BS every three minutes (black curve) and sound duration (red curve) over eight hours under fasting at (a) upper quadrant and (b) lower quadrant.
Figure 5The scaled sound index of BS and the sound duration at lower quadrant (a) over four hours after meal from participant L and (b) over two hours under fasting stage from participant No. 1 to 3.