AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

Impedance cardiography (ICG) is a popular bioimpedance application used for the non-invasive evaluation of the left ventricular stroke volume and contractility. It implies the correct determination of ejection start and end points and the amplitudes of certain peaks in a differentiated impedance cardiogram. An accurate identification of ejection onset by ICG is often problematic, especially in cardiologic patients, due to the peculiar character of the waveforms. A simple theoretical model was employed to test the consequences of the hypothesis that two major processes can contribute to the formation of an impedance systolic wave: (1) the pre-ejection changes in heart geometry and the surrounding vessels produced by ventricular contraction during the isovolumic phase, and (2) the expansion of aorta and adjacent arteries during the ejection per se. The former process initiates the pre-ejection wave while the latter triggers the ejection wave, both of which contribute to the impedance pulse waves associated with the heartbeats. A new two-bell model predicts a potential mechanism responsible for the abnormal shapes of ICG derivative dZ/dt due to the presence of the pre-ejection waves and explains the related errors in systolic time intervals and amplitude parameters derived from such ICG waveforms. It also advances an alternative viewpoint on the nature of the dZ/dt B-point notch. An appropriate decomposition method opens a promising way to avoid the masking effects of these waves and to correctly determine the onset of ejection as well as the corresponding peak amplitudes from the 'pathologically shaped' ICG signals.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0967-3334/35/6/943DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

icg waveforms
8
icg
6
ejection
6
age-dependent 'pathologic'
4
'pathologic' changes
4
changes icg
4
waveforms superposition
4
pre-ejection
4
superposition pre-ejection
4
pre-ejection ejection
4

Similar Publications

ICG signal denoising based on ICEEMDAN and PSO-VMD methods.

Phys Eng Sci Med

December 2024

College of Bioengineering, Chongqing University, Chongqing, 400030, China.

Impedance cardiography (ICG) plays a crucial role in clinically evaluating cardiac systolic and diastolic functions, along with various other cardiac parameters. However, its accuracy heavily depends on precisely identifying feature points reflecting cardiac function. Moreover, traditional signal processing techniques used to mitigate random noise and breathing artifacts may inadvertently distort the amplitude and temporal characteristics of ICG signals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Near-infrared fluorescence indocyanine green lymphangiography, a primary modality for detecting lymphedema, which is a disease due to lymphatic obstruction, enables real-time observations of lymphatics and reveals not only the spatial distribution of drainage (static analysis) but also information on the lymphatic contraction (dynamic analysis).

Methods: We have produced total lymphatic obstruction in the upper limbs of 18 Sprague-Dawley rats through the dissection of proximal (brachial and axillary) lymph nodes and 20-Gy radiation (dissection limbs). After the model formation for 1 week, 9 animal models were observed for 6 weeks using near-infrared fluorescence indocyanine green lymphangiography by injecting 6-μL ICG-BSA (indocyanine green-bovine serum albumin) solution of 20-μg/mL concentration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Impedance cardiography (ICG) is a low-cost, non-invasive technique that enables the clinical assessment of haemodynamic parameters, such as cardiac output and stroke volume (SV). Conventional ICG recordings are taken from the patient's thorax. However, access to ICG vital signs from the upper-arm brachial artery (as an associated surrogate) can enable user-convenient wearable armband sensor devices to provide an attractive option for gathering ICG trend-based indicators of general health, which offers particular advantages in ambulatory long-term monitoring settings.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Non-Standard Electrode Placement Strategies for ECG Signal Acquisition.

Sensors (Basel)

December 2022

Thomas Johann Seebeck Department of Electronics, Tallinn University of Technology, Ehitajate tee 5, 19086 Tallinn, Estonia.

Background: Wearable technologies for monitoring cardiovascular parameters, including electrocardiography (ECG) and impedance cardiography (ICG), propose a challenging research subject. The expectancy for wearable devices to be unobtrusive and miniaturized sets a goal to develop smarter devices and better methods for signal acquisition, processing, and decision-making.

Methods: In this work, non-standard electrode placement configurations (EPC) on the thoracic area and single arm were experimented for ECG signal acquisition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pre-ejection period (PEP), an indicator of sympathetic nervous system activity, is useful in psychophysiology and cardiovascular studies. Accurate PEP measurement is challenging and relies on robust identification of the timing of aortic valve opening, marked as the B point on impedance cardiogram (ICG) signals. The ICG sensitivity to noise and its waveform's morphological variability makes automated B point detection difficult, requiring inefficient and cumbersome expert visual annotation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!