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Beat-by-Beat Estimation of Hemodynamic Parameters in Left Ventricle Based on Phonocardiogram and Photoplethysmography Signals Using a Deep Learning Model: Preliminary Study. | LitMetric

Beat-by-beat monitoring of hemodynamic parameters in the left ventricle contributes to the early diagnosis and treatment of heart failure, valvular heart disease, and other cardiovascular diseases. Current accurate measurement methods for ventricular hemodynamic parameters are inconvenient for monitoring hemodynamic indexes in daily life. The objective of this study is to propose a method for estimating intraventricular hemodynamic parameters in a beat-to-beat style based on non-invasive PCG (phonocardiogram) and PPG (photoplethysmography) signals. Three beagle dogs were used as subjects. PCG, PPG, electrocardiogram (ECG), and invasive blood pressure signals in the left ventricle were synchronously collected while epinephrine medicine was injected into the veins to produce hemodynamic variations. Various doses of epinephrine were used to produce hemodynamic variations. A total of 40 records (over 12,000 cardiac cycles) were obtained. A deep neural network was built to simultaneously estimate four hemodynamic parameters of one cardiac cycle by inputting the PCGs and PPGs of the cardiac cycle. The outputs of the network were four hemodynamic parameters: left ventricular systolic blood pressure (SBP), left ventricular diastolic blood pressure (DBP), maximum rate of left ventricular pressure rise (MRR), and maximum rate of left ventricular pressure decline (MRD). The model built in this study consisted of a residual convolutional module and a bidirectional recurrent neural network module which learnt the local features and context relations, respectively. The training mode of the network followed a regression model, and the loss function was set as mean square error. When the network was trained and tested on one subject using a five-fold validation scheme, the performances were very good. The average correlation coefficients (CCs) between the estimated values and measured values were generally greater than 0.90 for SBP, DBP, MRR, and MRD. However, when the network was trained with one subject's data and tested with another subject's data, the performance degraded somewhat. The average CCs reduced from over 0.9 to 0.7 for SBP, DBP, and MRD; however, MRR had higher consistency, with the average CC reducing from over 0.9 to about 0.85 only. The generalizability across subjects could be improved if individual differences were considered. The performance indicates the possibility that hemodynamic parameters could be estimated by PCG and PPG signals collected on the body surface. With the rapid development of wearable devices, it has up-and-coming applications for self-monitoring in home healthcare environments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11351883PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11080842DOI Listing

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