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1.
Physiol Meas ; 38(10): R253-R279, 2017 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28869423

ABSTRACT

Management and monitoring of infants within the neonatal intensive care unit represents a unique challenge. It involves an array of life-threatening diseases, procedures with potentially lifelong impacts, co-morbidities associated with preterm birth and risk of infection from prolonged exposure to the hospital environment. With the integration of monitoring systems and increasing accessibility of high-resolution data, there is a growing interest in the utility of advanced data analyses in predictive monitoring and characterising patterns of disease. Such analyses may offer an opportunity to identify infants at high risk of certain conditions and to detect the onset of disease prior to manifestation of clinical signs. This allows caregivers more time to respond and mitigate any abnormal or potentially fatal changes. We review techniques for variability analysis as they have been or have the potential to be applied to neonatal intensive care, the disease conditions in which they have been tested, and technical as well as clinical challenges relevant to their application.


Subject(s)
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal , Monitoring, Physiologic , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Infant, Newborn
2.
Physiol Meas ; 36(6): 1297-309, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26006739

ABSTRACT

Recent studies showed that regional pulmonary perfusion can be reliably estimated using electrical impedance tomography (EIT) with the aid of hypertonic saline based contrast enhancement. Building on these successful studies, we studied contrast EIT for pulmonary perfusion defect caused by an artificially induced pulmonary embolism (PE) in a large ovine model (N = 8, 78 ± 7.8 kg). Furthermore, the efficacy of a less invasive contrast bolus of 0.77 ml kg(-1) of NaCl 3% was compared with a more concentrated bolus of 0.13 ml kg(-1) of NaCl 20%. Prior to the injection of each contrast bolus injection, ventilation was turned off to provide a total of 40 to 45 s of apnoea. Each bolus of impedance contrast was injected through a catheter into the right atrium. Pulmonary embolisation was performed by balloon occlusion of part of the right branch of the pulmonary trunk. Four parameters representing the kinetics of the contrast dilution in the lung were evaluated for statistical differences between baseline and PE, including peak value, maximum uptake, maximum washout and area under the curve of the averaged contrast dilution curve in each lung. Furthermore, the right lung to left lung (R2L) ratio of each the aforementioned parameters were assessed. While all of the R2L ratios yielded significantly different means between baseline and PE, it can be concluded that the R2L ratios of area under the curve and peak value of the averaged contrast dilution curve are the most promising and reliable in assessing PE. It was also found that the efficacy of the two types of impedance contrasts were not significantly different in distinguishing PE from baseline in our model.


Subject(s)
Pulmonary Embolism/diagnosis , Pulmonary Embolism/physiopathology , Regional Blood Flow , Tomography , Animals , Blood Volume , Electric Impedance , Male , Sheep
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25570157

ABSTRACT

Increased myocardial structural heterogeneity in response to ischemic injury following myocardial infarction (MI) is purported as the mechanism of ventricular arrhythmogenesis. Current modalities for in vivo assessment of structural heterogeneity for identification of arrhythmogenic substrate are limited due to the complex nature of the structural microenvironment post-MI. We investigated the utility of in vivo bio-impedance spectroscopy (BIS) in a large post-infarct animal model for differentiation between normal and infarcted tissue. We also investigated the quantitative effects of adipose and collagen on BIS assessment of myocardium. The results indicate that the degree of myocardial injury following chronic post-infarction remodeling could be reliably quantified (performed in triplicates) using BIS. Furthermore, the presence of intramyocardial adipose tissue that develops in conjunction with collagen within the infarct zone had a greater and significant influence on BIS then collagen tissue alone. These preliminary results indicate a potential role of BIS for quantitative assessment and characterization of complex arrhythmogenic substrates in ischemic cardiomyopathy.


Subject(s)
Dielectric Spectroscopy/methods , Heart/physiopathology , Myocardial Infarction/physiopathology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Myocardial Ischemia , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
4.
Physiol Meas ; 34(9): 991-1012, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23945151

ABSTRACT

We present an innovative bio-potential front-end capable of recording true unipolar ECG leads for the first time without making use of the Wilson central terminal. In addition to the convenience in applications such as continuous monitoring and rapid diagnosis, the information in unipolar recordings may yield unique diagnostic information as it avoids the need to essentially subtract data or make use of the averaging effect imposed from the Wilson central terminal. The system also allows direct, real-time software calculation of signals corresponding to standard ECG leads which achieve correlations in excess of 92% with a gold standard ECG during a parallel in vivo recording. In addition, the implemented circuit is wideband (0.05-1000 Hz), compatible with standard (Ag/AgCl) bio-potential electrodes, and dry (paste-less) textile electrodes. The circuit is also low power, requiring less than 50 mW (when powered at 12 V) per standard ECG lead (two channels required). It is therefore well suited for wearable, long-term applications.


Subject(s)
Electrocardiography/methods , Adult , Cardiac Catheterization , Electrocardiography/instrumentation , Electrodes , Humans , Male
5.
Physiol Meas ; 33(5): 695-706, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22532291

ABSTRACT

Although electrical impedance tomography (EIT) for ventilation monitoring is on the verge of clinical trials, pulmonary perfusion imaging with EIT remains a challenge, especially in spontaneously breathing subjects. In anticipation of more research on this subject, we believe a thorough review is called for. In this paper, findings related to the physiological origins and electrical characteristics of this signal are summarized, highlighting properties that are particularly relevant to EIT. The perfusion impedance change signal is significantly smaller in amplitude compared with the changes due to ventilation. Therefore, the hardware used for this purpose must be more sensitive and more resilient to noise. In previous works, some signal- or image-processing methods have been required to separate these two signals. Three different techniques are reviewed in this paper, including the ECG-gating method, frequency-domain-filtering-based methods and a principal-component-analysis-based method. In addition, we review a number of experimental studies on both human and animal subjects that employed EIT for perfusion imaging, with promising results in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) and pulmonary arterial hypertension as well as other potential applications. In our opinion, PE is most likely to become the main focus for perfusion EIT in the future, especially for heavily instrumented patients in the intensive care unit (ICU).


Subject(s)
Lung/blood supply , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Perfusion Imaging/methods , Tomography/methods , Animals , Electric Impedance , Humans
6.
Comput Math Methods Med ; 2012: 585786, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22481975

ABSTRACT

There is a need in critical care units for continuous cardiopulmonary monitoring techniques. ECG gated electrical impedance tomography is able to localize the impedance variations occurring during the cardiac cycle. This method is a safe, inexpensive and potentially fast technique for cardiac output imaging but the spatial resolution is presently low, particularly for central locations such as the heart. Many parameters including noise deteriorate the reconstruction result. One of the main obstacles in cardiac imaging at the heart location is the high impedance of lungs and muscles on the dorsal and posterior side of body. In this study we are investigating improvements of the measurement and initial conductivity estimation of the internal electrode by modelling an internal electrode inside the esophagus. We consider 16 electrodes connected around a cylindrical mesh. With the random noise level set near 0.05% of the signal we evaluated the Graz consensus reconstruction algorithm for electrical impedance tomography. The modelling and simulation results showed that the quality of the target in reconstructed images was improved by up to 5 times for amplitude response, position error, resolution, shape deformation and ringing effects with perturbations located in cardiac related positions when using an internal electrode.


Subject(s)
Electrocardiography/instrumentation , Electrodes, Implanted , Esophagus , Models, Cardiovascular , Tomography/methods , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Electric Impedance , Electrocardiography/methods , Humans
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