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1.
PLoS One ; 17(12): e0277932, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36584187

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The electrocardiogram (ECG) is a widely used diagnostic that observes the heart activities of patients to ascertain a heart abnormality diagnosis. The artifacts or noises are primarily associated with the problem of ECG signal processing. Conventional denoising techniques have been proposed in previous literature; however, some lacks, such as the determination of suitable wavelet basis function and threshold, can be a time-consuming process. This paper presents end-to-end learning using a denoising auto-encoder (DAE) for denoising algorithms and convolutional-bidirectional long short-term memory (ConvBiLSTM) for ECG delineation to classify ECG waveforms in terms of the PQRST-wave and isoelectric lines. The denoising reconstruction using unsupervised learning based on the encoder-decoder process can be proposed to improve the drawbacks. First, The ECG signals are reduced to a low-dimensional vector in the encoder. Second, the decoder reconstructed the signals. The last, the reconstructed signals of ECG can be processed to ConvBiLSTM. The proposed architecture of DAE-ConvBiLSTM is the end-to-end diagnosis of heart abnormality detection. RESULTS: As a result, the performance of DAE-ConvBiLSTM has obtained an average of above 98.59% accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, precision, and F1 score from the existing studies. The DAE-ConvBiLSTM has also experimented with detecting T-wave (due to ventricular repolarisation) morphology abnormalities. CONCLUSION: The development architecture for detecting heart abnormalities using an unsupervised learning DAE and supervised learning ConvBiLSTM can be proposed for an end-to-end learning algorithm. In the future, the precise accuracy of the ECG main waveform will affect heart abnormalities detection in clinical practice.


Subject(s)
Heart Defects, Congenital , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Algorithms , Electrocardiography/methods , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/diagnosis
2.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(6)2022 Mar 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35336500

ABSTRACT

Physicians manually interpret an electrocardiogram (ECG) signal morphology in routine clinical practice. This activity is a monotonous and abstract task that relies on the experience of understanding ECG waveform meaning, including P-wave, QRS-complex, and T-wave. Such a manual process depends on signal quality and the number of leads. ECG signal classification based on deep learning (DL) has produced an automatic interpretation; however, the proposed method is used for specific abnormality conditions. When the ECG signal morphology change to other abnormalities, it cannot proceed automatically. To generalize the automatic interpretation, we aim to delineate ECG waveform. However, the output of delineation process only ECG waveform duration classes for P-wave, QRS-complex, and T-wave. It should be combined with a medical knowledge rule to produce the abnormality interpretation. The proposed model is applied for atrial fibrillation (AF) identification. This study meets the AF criteria with RR irregularities and the absence of P-waves in essential oscillations for even more accurate identification. The QT database by Physionet is utilized for developing the delineation model, and it validates with The Lobachevsky University Database. The results show that our delineation model works properly, with 98.91% sensitivity, 99.01% precision, 99.79% specificity, 99.79% accuracy, and a 98.96% F1 score. We use about 4058 normal sinus rhythm records and 1804 AF records from the experiment to identify AF conditions that are taken from three datasets. The comprehensive testing has produced higher negative predictive value and positive predictive value. This means that the proposed model can identify AF conditions from ECG signal delineation. Our approach can considerably contribute to AF diagnosis with these results.


Subject(s)
Atrial Fibrillation , Deep Learning , Atrial Fibrillation/diagnosis , Databases, Factual , Electrocardiography/methods , Humans , Predictive Value of Tests
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