Title :
On the early detection of perinatal hypoxia with information-theory based methods
Author :
Santiago-Mozos, Ricardo ; Garcia-Vizuete, Beatriz ; Lillo-Castellano, Jose Maria ; Rojo-Alvarez, Jose ; Martin-Caballero, Carlos
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Signal Theor. & Commun., Univ. Rey Juan Carlos, Madrid, Spain
Abstract :
Perinatal hypoxia is a severe condition that may harm fetus organs permanently. When the fetus brain is partially deprived from oxygen, the control of the fetal heart rate (FHR) is affected. We hypothesized that advanced processing of the FHR can reveal whether the fetus is under perinatal hypoxia. We analyzed FHR morphology with normalized compression distance (NCD) that compares two arbitrary sequences and outputs their dissimilarity. This parameter-free measure exploits linear and non-linear relations in the data and allows the comparison of sequences of different sizes. It was applied to raw FHR sequences and to a set of statistics computed from them (e.g. moments on 5 minutes signal windows). We classified the cases from the NCD dissimilarity matrix by using a simple nearest neighbor classifier and leave-one-out cross-validation. Best results in a database with 26 FHR recordings (13 controls and 13 cases) were provided by the central moment of order 3 calculated over sliding windows of 5 minutes on the interval from 4 to 3 hours to delivery. The resulting accuracy was 0.88 with sensitivity 0.92 and specificity 0.85.
Keywords :
biological organs; brain; diseases; electrocardiography; information theory; medical signal processing; obstetrics; sensitivity; signal classification; statistical analysis; FHR morphology; FHR recordings; arbitrary outputs; arbitrary sequences; early perinatal hypoxia detection; fetal heart rate; fetus brain; fetus organs; information-theory based methods; leave-one-out cross-validation; normalized compression distance; parameter-free measurement; sensitivity; signal windows; simple nearest neighbor classifier; sliding windows; statistics; time 5 min; Accuracy; Cardiography; Databases; Fetal heart rate; Fetus; Gynecology; Time series analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Computing in Cardiology Conference (CinC), 2013
Conference_Location :
Zaragoza
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0884-4