Title :
Piecewise-linear trend detection in longitudinal physiological measurements
Author :
Redmond, Stephen J. ; Basilakis, Jim ; Xie, Yang ; Celler, Branko G. ; Lovell, Nigel H.
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Biomed. Eng., Univ. of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Abstract :
Recently, telecare solutions have been demonstrated as an effective means of monitoring chronic disease at a distance. A clinician may be managing many tens or hundreds of remote patients, prompting the need for a decision support system (DSS) to provide a more automated approach to managing these vast amounts of data. While simple threshold-based alert techniques provide some utility in notifying clinicians of extreme out-of-range parameter values, more incipient changes in a subject´s condition may be sooner recognized by identifying trends in the longitudinal parameter data. Here we describe an approach for obtaining a piecewise-linear fit, to longitudinal physiological trend data, comparable with a similar fitting performed by a human observer, using a graphical user interface. The technique has been applied to both simulated and real data, and a comparison performed against the human scoring for each. On simulated data, the method matches or betters the human performance in most cases; with the greatest improvement observed in more noisy data. Similarly, for real physiological data, the deviation from the human marking, as a fraction of total variability of the signal, is less than 0.35.
Keywords :
biomedical telemetry; decision support systems; diseases; graphical user interfaces; medical computing; patient monitoring; piecewise linear techniques; chronic disease monitoring; decision support system; graphical user interface; human marking; longitudinal physiological measurement; piecewise-linear trend detection; telecare solutions; threshold-based alert technique; Algorithms; Automation; Computer Graphics; Computer Simulation; Decision Support Systems, Clinical; Decision Support Techniques; Humans; Normal Distribution; Regression Analysis; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Software; Telemedicine; Time Factors; User-Computer Interface;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2009. EMBC 2009. Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3296-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1557-170X
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2009.5332406