| Literature DB >> 30908308 |
Xuhao Du1, Gary Allwood1, K Mary Webberley1, Andrisha-Jade Inderjeeth2, Adam Osseiran3, Barry James Marshall1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common and debilitating disorder estimated to affect approximately 11% of the world's population. Typically, IBS is a diagnosis of exclusion after patients undergo a costly and invasive colonoscopy to exclude organic disease. Clinician's and researchers have identified a need for a new cost-effective, accurate, and noninvasive diagnostic test for IBS.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30908308 PMCID: PMC6602778 DOI: 10.14309/ctg.0000000000000017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Gastroenterol ISSN: 2155-384X Impact factor: 4.488
Figure 1Process flow diagram for gathering data, creation of a machine learning–based classification model, and the 2 stages of testing.
Figure 2Participant flow for the study.
Demographics of healthy participants
Demographics of IBS participants
Performance of the IBS Acoustic Index model in predicting IBS, as assessed by leave-one-out cross-validation of the optimal model
Evaluation measures of the leave-one-out cross-validation for the irritable bowel syndrome Acoustic Index model
Evaluation measures of the irritable bowel syndrome Acoustic Index model derived from 7 different k-fold cross-validation methods
Performance of the IBS Acoustic Index model in predicting IBS, as assessed by bootstrapping (300 repetitions) of the optimal model
Evaluation measures of the irritable bowel syndrome Acoustic Index model derived from bootstrapping (300 repetitions)
Figure 3Irritable bowel syndrome Acoustic Index results for the 30 consecutive independent test participants.
Performance of the IBS Acoustic Index model in diagnosing IBS in the independent test
Accuracy measures for the irritable bowel syndrome Acoustic Index in the independent test using 15 irritable bowel syndrome participants and 15 healthy participants
Figure 4Quantity density distribution. The distribution of 46 irritable bowel syndrome participants and 52 healthy participants across bowel sound quantity density (bowel sounds per second) for the 2 recordings (120 minutes fasting and 40 minutes fed) from the upper right quadrant. The distributions were smoothed to a normal distribution.
Figure 5Summed amplitude distribution. The distribition of 46 irritable bowel syndrome and 52 healthy study participants across summed amplitude values for all bowel sounds recorded at the lower right quadrant, during the fed and fasted periods. Summed amplitude values were scaled to compensate for the longer duration of the recording made during the fasting period. The distributions were smoothed to a normal distribution.