DocumentCode :
1269148
Title :
Comparison of impedance and inductance ventilation sensors on adults during breathing, motion, and simulated airway obstruction
Author :
Cohen, Kevin P. ; Ladd, William M. ; Beams, David M. ; Sheers, William S. ; Radwin, Robert G. ; Tompkins, Willis J. ; Webster, John G.
Author_Institution :
Lincoln Lab., MIT, Lexington, MA, USA
Volume :
44
Issue :
7
fYear :
1997
fDate :
7/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
555
Lastpage :
566
Abstract :
The goal of this study was to compare the relative performance of two noninvasive ventilation sensing technologies on adults during artifacts. The authors recorded changes in transthoracic impedance and cross-sectional area of the abdomen (abd) and ribcage (rc) using impedance pneumography (IP) and respiratory inductance plethysmography (RIP) on ten adult subjects during natural breathing, motion artifact, simulated airway obstruction, yawning, snoring, apnea, and coughing. The authors used a pneumotachometer to measure air flow and tidal volume as the standard. They calibrated all sensors during natural breathing, and performed measurements during all maneuvers without changing the calibration parameters. No sensor provided the most-accurate measure of tidal volume for all maneuvers. Overall, the combination of inductance sensors [RIP(sum)] calibrated during an isovolume maneuver had a bias (weighted mean difference) as low or lower than all individual sensors and all combinations of sensors. The IP(rc) sensor had a bias as low or lower than any individual sensor. The cross-correlation coefficient between sensors was high during natural breathing, but decreased during artifacts. The cross correlation between sensor pairs was lower during artifacts without breathing than it was during maneuvers with breathing for four different sensor combinations. The authors tested a simple breath-detection algorithm on all sensors and found that RIP(sum) resulted in the fewest number of false breath detections, with sensitivity of 90.8% and positive predictivity of 93.6%.
Keywords :
biomedical equipment; biomedical measurement; electric impedance measurement; inductance measurement; patient monitoring; pneumodynamics; adults; apnea; artifacts; breathing; calibration parameters; coughing; cross-correlation coefficient; false breath detections; impedance ventilation sensors; inductance ventilation sensors; isovolume maneuver; motion; simulated airway obstruction; snoring; yawning; Abdomen; Fluid flow measurement; Impedance; Inductance; Measurement standards; Performance evaluation; Plethysmography; Sleep apnea; Ventilation; Volume measurement; Adult; Airway Obstruction; Artifacts; Calibration; Cardiography, Impedance; Electrodes; Humans; Male; Patient Simulation; Predictive Value of Tests; Pulmonary Ventilation; Respiratory Function Tests; Respiratory Mechanics;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/10.594896
Filename :
594896
Link To Document :
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