Title :
Development of techniques for measurement of left ventricular ejection time
Author :
Wenfeng Duan ; Dingchang Zheng ; Eggett, Christopher ; Langley, Philip ; Murray, Alan
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Cellular Med., Newcastle Univ., Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Abstract :
This study aimed to develop different measurement techniques for measurement of left ventricular ejection time (LVET) measurement from echocardiography, thoracic impedance cardiography (ICG) and peripheral photoplethysmography (PPG). Healthy subjects volunteered for this preliminary investigation. For each subject, cardiac aortic valve movement and aortic blood flow were examined by Mmode and Doppler echocardiography simultaneously with leG and peripheral PPG pulses for 15 s. Using all the measureable beats from each subject, the beat-by-beat measurement variability (SD of LEVT) and the mean value of L VET were compared between techniques. The L VET measured from Doppler imaging had the smallest mean of beat-by-beat SD across all subjects (9 ms), which was better than that from M-mode echocardiography and PPG (both were 11 ms). leG had the largest mean beat-by-beat SD (22 ms). The mean L VET across all subjects from the M-mode echo cardiography was 328 ms, which was longer than that from Doppler imaging (309 ms) (P <; 0.001). Mean LVETs from leG (364 ms) and PPG (348 ms) were both significantly longer those from images (P <; 0.05). In conclusion, with simultaneously recorded cardiac images and physiological signals, it has been quantitatively demonstrated that the leG and PPG not only gave longer L VET measurements, but also had larger measurement variability than the M-mode and Doppler images.
Keywords :
Doppler measurement; echocardiography; electrocardiography; haemodynamics; medical image processing; photoplethysmography; Doppler echocardiography; Doppler imaging; LVET measurement; M-mode images; aortic blood flow; beat-by-beat measurement variability; cardiac aortic valve movement; left ventricular ejection time measurement; peripheral photoplethysmography; physiological signals; thoracic impedance cardiography; time 11 ms; time 15 s; time 22 ms; time 328 ms; time 364 ms; Abstracts; Cardiography; Impedance; Impedance measurement; Physiology; Time measurement; Valves;
Conference_Titel :
Computing in Cardiology Conference (CinC), 2014
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-4346-3