Title :
Removal of cardiopulmonary resuscitation artifacts from human ECG using an efficient matching pursuit-like algorithm
Author :
Husóy, John Håkon ; Eilevstjónn, Joar ; Eftestól, Trygve ; Aase, Sven Ole ; Myklebust, Helge ; Steen, Petter Andreas
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Stavanger Univ. Coll., Norway
Abstract :
We present a computationally efficient and numerically robust solution to the problem of removing artifacts due to precordial compressions and ventilations from the human electrocardiogram (ECG) in an emergency medicine setting. Incorporated into automated external defibrillators, this would allow for simultaneous ECG signal analysis and administration of precordial compressions and ventilations, resulting in significant clinical improvement to the treatment of cardiac arrest patients. While we have previously demonstrated the feasibility of such artifact removal using a multichannel Wiener filter, we here focus on an efficient matching pursuit-like approach making practical real-time implementations of such a scheme feasible for a wide variety of sampling rates and filter lengths. Using more realistic data than what have been previously available, we present evidence showing the excellent performance of our approach and quantify its computational complexity.
Keywords :
Wiener filters; adaptive filters; computational complexity; correlation methods; electrocardiography; iterative methods; medical signal processing; recursive filters; signal denoising; automated external defibrillators; cardiac arrest patients; cardiopulmonary resuscitation artifacts removal; efficient matching pursuit-like algorithm; emergency medicine; human electrocardiogram; ill-conditioned autocorrelation matrices; multichannel Wiener filter; multichannel adaptive filtering; precordial compressions; precordial ventilations; real-time implementations; simultaneous signal analysis; Cardiology; Electrocardiography; Humans; Matching pursuit algorithms; Medical treatment; Pursuit algorithms; Robustness; Signal analysis; Ventilation; Wiener filter; Algorithms; Animals; Artifacts; Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation; Computer Simulation; Electrocardiography; Feasibility Studies; Humans; Models, Cardiovascular; Models, Statistical; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Swine; Tachycardia, Ventricular; Ventricular Fibrillation;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2002.804591