|

Prediction of arterial blood pressure waveforms from photoplethysmogram signals via fully convolutional neural networks.

Researchers

Journal

Modalities

Models

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is one of the most serious diseases threatening human health. Arterial blood pressure (ABP) waveforms, containing vivid cardiovascular information, are of great significance for the diagnosis and the prevention of CVD. This paper proposes a deep learning model, named ABP-Net, to transform photoplethysmogram (PPG) signals into ABP waveforms that contain vital physiological information related to cardiovascular systems. In order to guarantee the quality of the predicted ABP waveforms, the structure of the network, the input signals and the loss functions are carefully designed. Specifically, a Wave-U-Net, one kind of fully convolutional neural networks (CNN), is taken as the core architecture of the ABP-Net. Besides the original PPG signals, its first derivative and second derivative signals are all utilized as the inputs of the ABP-Net. Additionally, the maximal absolute loss, accompany with the mean squared error loss is employed to ensure the match of the predicted ABP waveform with the reference one. The performance of the proposed ABP network is tested on the public MIMIC II database both in subject-dependent and subject-independent manners. Both results verify the superior performance of the proposed model over those existing methods accordingly. The mean absolute error (MAE) and the root-mean-square error (RMSE) between the predicted waveforms via the ABP-Net and the reference ones are 3.20 mmHg and 4.38 mmHg during the subject-dependent experiments while those are 5.57 mmHg and 7.15 mmHg during the subject-independent experiments. Benefiting from the predicted high-quality ABP waveforms, more ABP related physiological parameters can be better obtained, which effectively expands the application scope of PPG devices.Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *