Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
May 2009
We investigate two RR irregularity measures suitable for Atrial Fibrillation (AFIB) detection in ECG monitors, one based on the absolute deviation and the other based on the difference between successive RR intervals. A sequence of RR intervals is fed to the irregularity measures after applying certain constraints on length and beat classifications to provide criteria for detection of AFIB. Receiver Operating Curves (ROC) are used to analyze and compare the performance of the two methods against MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database, MIT-BIH AFIB Database and a proprietary AFIB Database.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
March 2008
Inverse electrocardiography in recent years has generally been approached using one of two quite distinct source models, either a potential-based approach or an activation-based approach. Each approach has advantages and disadvantages relative to the other, which are inherited by all specific methods based on a given approach. Recently our group has been working to develop models which can bridge between these two approaches, hoping to capture some of the most important advantages of both.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Biomed Eng
February 2007
In the context of inverse electrocardiography, we examine the problem of using measurements from sets of electrocardiographic leads that are smaller than the number of nodes in the associated geometric models of the torso. We compared several methods to estimate the solution from such reduced-lead measurements sets both with and without knowledge of prior statistics of the measurements. We present here simulation results that indicate that deleting rows of the forward matrix corresponding to the unmeasured leads performs best in the absence of prior statistics, and that Bayesian (or least-squares) estimation performs best in the presence of prior statistics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
June 2007
We describe several current approaches which include temporal information into the inverse problem of electrocardiography. Some of these approaches operate directly on potential-based source models, and we show how three recent methods, introduced with rather distinct assumptions, can be placed in a common framework and compared. Others operate on parameterized models of the cardiac sources, and we discuss briefly how recent developments in curve evolution methods for inverse problems may allow more physiologically complex parametric models to be employed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe introduce two wavefront-based methods for the inverse problem of electrocardiography, which we term wavefront-based curve reconstruction (WBCR) and wavefront-based potential reconstruction (WBPR). In the WBCR approach, the epicardial activation wavefront is modeled as a curve evolving on the heart surface, with the evolution governed by factors derived phenomenologically from prior measured data. The body surface potential/wavefront relationship is modeled via an intermediate mapping of wavefront to epicardial potentials, again derived phenomenologically.
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