• DocumentCode
    3127090
  • Title

    Comparison of Laplacian and Bipolar ECGs for R-wave Detection during Noise

  • Author

    Ghanem, Raja N. ; Gillberg, Jeffrey M. ; Wanasek, Kevin ; Wood, Nicole ; Abeyratne, Athula ; Mitrani, Raul

  • Author_Institution
    Cardiac Rhythm Disease Manage., Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, MN
  • fYear
    2006
  • fDate
    Aug. 30 2006-Sept. 3 2006
  • Firstpage
    3994
  • Lastpage
    3997
  • Abstract
    Body surface Laplacian mapping localizes cardiac activity and provides more detailed distributions compared to body surface potential mapping. Systematic comparison of the performance of bipolar and Laplacian ECGs during noise has not been performed. To determine whether Laplacian ECGs (2.5cm diameter concentric rings) can reduce noise (myopotential and motion artifacts) and improve signal to noise ratio (SNR) compared to bipolar (4cm spacing) ECGs, Laplacian and bipolar ECGs were recorded from the anterior (precordial V3) and lateral (precordial V6) chest regions in 25 patients undergoing posture changes and in-office exercises. Mean peak-to-peak (Vpp ), root mean square noise (Noiserms) and SNR were computed across all activities and patients. Sensing performance using an R-wave detector with an auto-adjusting exponentially decaying threshold was assessed. Across all maneuvers, mean Vpp was larger for the bipolar ECG compared to the Laplacian ECG on the anterior (0.65plusmn0.07 vs. 0.14plusmn0.07 mV, p<0.05) and lateral (0.65plusmn0.07 vs. 0.05plusmn0.07 mV, p<0.05) regions. Laplacian ECGs resulted in least Noiserms compared to bipolar ECGs (anterior: 0.02plusmn0.01 vs. 0.05plusmn0.01, p<0.05; lateral: 0.01plusmn0.01 vs. 0.07plusmn0.01, p<0.05). Bipolar and Laplacian SNRs were comparable on the anterior chest (14.05plusmn0.95 vs. 13.49plusmn0.95, p=NS). On the lateral chest, bipolar SNR was larger than Laplacian SNR (13.78plusmn0.95 vs. 8.67plusmn0.96, p<0.05). Laplacian SNR on the anterior chest was larger compared to the lateral chest, confirming that Laplacian ECGs are sensitive to mapping location. Sensing performance showed that bipolar ECGs resulted in marginally superior sensing accuracy compared to Laplacian ECGs. In conclusion, Laplacian ECGs offer no advantage in SNR compared with standard bipolar ECGs
  • Keywords
    cardiovascular system; electrocardiography; 2.5 cm; R-wave detector; SNR; bipolar ECG; body surface Laplacian potential mapping; cardiac activity; motion artifacts; myopotential; root mean square noise; signal to noise ratio; Cardiac disease; Cardiology; Cardiovascular diseases; Cities and towns; Electric variables measurement; Electrocardiography; Laplace equations; Noise reduction; Rhythm; Signal to noise ratio;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2006. EMBS '06. 28th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    New York, NY
  • ISSN
    1557-170X
  • Print_ISBN
    1-4244-0032-5
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1557-170X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/IEMBS.2006.259381
  • Filename
    4462675