Force plate monitoring of human hemodynamics.

Nonlinear Biomed Phys

University of Hradec Králové, Rokitanského 62, CZ - 500 03 Hradec Králové, Czech Republic.

Published: February 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • Noninvasive ballistocardiography records heart and blood circulation movements using a force plate, leveraging new methods from differential geometry to analyze multivariate time series.
  • The study shows that body recoils from cardiac activity can visualize heart movements and pulse wave propagation, correlating noninvasive results with invasive cardiac catheterization data.
  • This noninvasive monitoring could help estimate aortic pulse wave velocity, a key indicator of aortic stiffness and heart disease risk, though further research is needed for clinical applications.

Article Abstract

Background: Noninvasive recording of movements caused by the heartbeat and the blood circulation is known as ballistocardiography. Several studies have shown the capability of a force plate to detect cardiac activity in the human body. The aim of this paper is to present a new method based on differential geometry of curves to handle multivariate time series obtained by ballistocardiographic force plate measurements.

Results: We show that the recoils of the body caused by cardiac motion and blood circulation provide a noninvasive method of displaying the motions of the heart muscle and the propagation of the pulse wave along the aorta and its branches. The results are compared with the data obtained invasively during a cardiac catheterization. We show that the described noninvasive method is able to determine the moment of a particular heart movement or the time when the pulse wave reaches certain morphological structure.

Conclusions: Monitoring of heart movements and pulse wave propagation may be used e.g. to estimate the aortic pulse wave velocity, which is widely accepted as an index of aortic stiffness with the application of predicting risk of heart disease in individuals. More extended analysis of the method is however needed to assess its possible clinical application.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2315646PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1753-4631-2-1DOI Listing

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