IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine | |
An Adaptive Seismocardiography (SCG)-ECG Multimodal Framework for Cardiac Gating Using Artificial Neural Networks | |
C. A. Wick1  W. F. Auffermann2  S. Tridandapani3  P. T. Bhatti4  Jingting Yao4  | |
[1] Camerad Technologies, Global Center for Medical Innovation, Atlanta, GA, USA;Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, School of Medicine, The University of Utah, Salt Lake, UT, USA;Department of Radiology, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA;School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA; | |
关键词: Artificial neural networks; cardiac gating; cardiac quiescence; computed tomography angiography; coronary angiography; echocardiography; | |
DOI : 10.1109/JTEHM.2018.2869141 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
To more accurately trigger data acquisition and reduce radiation exposure of coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), a multimodal framework utilizing both electrocardiography (ECG) and seismocardiography (SCG) for CCTA prospective gating is presented. Relying upon a three-layer artificial neural network that adaptively fuses individual ECGand SCG-based quiescence predictions on a beat-by-beat basis, this framework yields a personalized quiescence prediction for each cardiac cycle. This framework was tested on seven healthy subjects (age: 22-48; m/f: 4/3) and eleven cardiac patients (age: 31-78; m/f: 6/5). Seventeen out of 18 benefited from the fusion-based prediction as compared to the ECG-only-based prediction, the traditional prospective gating method. Only one patient whose SCG was compromised by noise was more suitable for ECG-only-based prediction. On average, our fused ECGSCG-based method improves cardiac quiescence prediction by 47% over ECG-only-based method; with both compared against the gold standard, B-mode echocardiography. Fusion-based prediction is also more resistant to heart rate variability than ECG-onlyor SCG-only-based prediction. To assess the clinical value, the diagnostic quality of the CCTA reconstructed volumes from the quiescence derived from ECG-, SCGand fusion-based predictions were graded by a board-certified radiologist using a Likert response format. Grading results indicated the fusion-based prediction improved diagnostic quality. ECG may be a sub-optimal modality for quiescence prediction and can be enhanced by the multimodal framework. The combination of ECG and SCG signals for quiescence prediction bears promise for a more personalized and reliable approach than ECG-only-based method to predict cardiac quiescence for prospective CCTA gating.
【 授权许可】
Unknown