Abstract
To develop an algorithm that corrects
pulmonary artery pressure signals of ventilated patients for the
respiration artifact. The algorithm should test the validity of
the pulmonary pressure signal and differentiate between the
cyclic respiration artifact and true measurement artifacts.
Methods. The shape of each pulmonary pressure beat is
described by eight characteristic features, including mean pressure
value and the systolic and diastolic timing and pressure
values. The features are corrected for the respiration artifact by
fitting them in a least-squares sense on the first and second
harmonics of the ventilator frequency. The corrected features
are used by a signal validation algorithm, which adds a validity
flag to each pressure beat. The validation algorithm rejects
pressure beats with sudden changes in their shape but adapts
itself when the changes persist. Results. The performance of
the correction and validation technique was evaluated using
pulmonary artery pressure signals of 30 patients who were
scheduled for open heart surgery. The algorithm correctly
recognized as invalid data those pressure signals disturbed by
coagulation, surgical manipulations, or flushes of the pressure
line. The algorithm marked on average 77 + 11% of the
pulmonary pressure beats as valid. Conclusions. The validation
algorithm marked sufficient pressure beats as valid to
update a trend display every 5 sec. The correction algorithm
enabled the validation algorithm to differentiate between true
measurement artifacts and the respiration artifact.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 397-403 |
Number of pages | 7 |
Journal | Journal of Clinical Monitoring |
Volume | 12 |
Publication status | Published - 1996 |