Title :
Dynamic spectral analysis of arterial Doppler blood flow signals using time-frequency representations
Author :
Long, X. ; Lee, J.W. ; Roberts, V.C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Med. Eng. & Phys., King´´s Coll., London, UK
fDate :
31 Oct-3 Nov 1996
Abstract :
Doppler signals from a disturbed arterial blood flow are very likely to be nonstationary for they usually have a time-varying frequency structure caused by a complicated flow pattern. Therefore conventional Fourier analysis based methods are unsuitable for this application. This paper introduces the application of joint time-frequency analysis (TFA) to estimate the frequency dynamics of arterial Doppler blood flow signals and to detect the presence of small stenoses of the artery. The short time Fourier transform (STFT), Wigner distribution (WD), and Choi-Williams distribution (CWD) were investigated. The results of synthetic signal analysis show that the STFT, WD and CWD follow the transient changes of frequency well, and the STFT and CWD also behave well for multicomponent signals. Doppler spectra were obtained by means of the FFT, STFT, WD, and CWD for different flow rates and positions along a simulated blood vessel for stenoses ranging from 2% to 25% cross sectional area reduction (CSAR) using a blood analogue. The results indicate that all of these methods are to some extent capable of detecting stenoses as small as 2% CSAR by identifying the existence of negative frequency components in the spectra, and the CWD appears at this stage to be superior to the STFT and WD
Keywords :
Doppler measurement; Fourier analysis; Fourier transforms; Wigner distribution; acoustic signal processing; biomedical ultrasonics; blood flow measurement; medical signal processing; signal representation; spectral analysis; time-frequency analysis; Choi-Williams distribution; Doppler ultrasound; Wigner distribution; arterial Doppler blood flow signals; complicated flow pattern; cross sectional area reduction; disturbed arterial blood flow; dynamic spectral analysis; frequency dynamics; multicomponent signals; negative frequency components; nonstationary signals; short time Fourier transform; simulated blood vesse; small stenoses; synthetic signal analysis; time-frequency representations; transient changes of frequency; Arteries; Blood flow; Blood vessels; Fourier transforms; Frequency estimation; Signal analysis; Signal detection; Spectral analysis; Time frequency analysis; Transient analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 1996. Bridging Disciplines for Biomedicine. Proceedings of the 18th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Amsterdam
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3811-1
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.1996.652018