| Literature DB >> 34211007 |
Etsunori Fujita1,2, Masahiro Horikawa3, Yoshika Nobuhiro3, Shinichiro Maeda3, Shigeyuki Kojima3, Yumi Ogura3, Kohji Murata4, Tomohiko Kisaka5, Kazushi Taoda6, Shigehiko Kaneko7, Masao Yoshizumi8.
Abstract
With a sound sensing system using stochastic resonance (4SR), it became possible to obtain an acoustic pulse wave (APW)-a waveform created via a mixture of apex beat and heart sound. We examined 50 subjects who were healthy, with no underlying cardiovascular diseases. We could determine boundary frequency (BF) using APW and phonocardiogram signals. APW data was divided into two bands, one from 0.5 Hz to BF, and a second one from BF to 50 Hz. This permitted the extraction of cardiac apex beat (CAB) and cardiac acoustic sound (CAS), respectively. BF could be expressed by a quadratic function of heart rate, and made it possible to collect CAB and CAS in real time. According to heart rate variability analysis, the fluctuation was 1/f, which indicated an efficient cardiac movement when heart rate was 70 to 80/min. In the frequency band between 0.5 Hz and BF, CAB readings collected from the precordial region resembled apex cardiogram data. The waveforms were classified into five types. Therefore, the new 4SR sensing system can be used as a physical diagnostic tool to obtain biological pulse wave data non-invasively and repeatedly over a long period, and it shows promise for broader applications, including AI analysis.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34211007 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-92983-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379