DocumentCode
3081406
Title
Asymmetry in lung sound intensities detected by respiratory acoustic thoracic imaging (RATHI) and clinical pulmonary auscultation
Author
Torres-Jiménez, A. ; Charleston-Villalobos, S. ; González-Camarena, R. ; Chi-Lem, G. ; Aljama-Corrales, T.
Author_Institution
Biomedical Engineering Program, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico City 09340, Mexico
fYear
2008
fDate
20-25 Aug. 2008
Firstpage
4797
Lastpage
4800
Abstract
RATHI was introduced as an attempt to further improve the association between anatomical zones and specific breathing activity, both spatially and temporally. This work compares RATHI with clinical pulmonary auscultation (PA) to assess the concordance between both procedures to detect asymmetries in lung sound (LS) intensities. Twelve healthy young males participated in the study and were auscultated by two experts. RATHI consisted in the acquisition of acoustical signals with an array of 5×5 sensors, while experts auscultated and described the intensity of LS heard using the same stethoscope on each sensor´s position within the array. Comparisons were established looking for intensity asymmetries between apical vs. basal pulmonary regions and right vs. left hemithorax. By RATHI, most of the subjects showed asymmetries between apical and basal regions higher than 20%, whereas between left and right hemithorax asymmetries higher than 20% occurred only half of the time. RATHI and PA agreed 83 to 100% when apical to base acoustical information was compared, but when left to right asymmetries were considered these figures were about 40 to 50%. We concluded that RATHI has advantages as it gave more detailed and measurable information on LS than clinicians, who could not detect intensity asymmetries mainly below 20%.
Keywords
Acoustic imaging; Acoustic measurements; Acoustic sensors; Acoustic signal detection; Cities and towns; Lungs; Microphone arrays; Sensor arrays; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Stethoscope; Acoustics; Auscultation; Diagnostic Imaging; Humans; Male; Reproducibility of Results; Respiratory Mechanics; Respiratory Sounds; Sensitivity and Specificity; Sound Spectrography; Thorax; Young Adult;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2008. EMBS 2008. 30th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
ISSN
1557-170X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1814-5
Electronic_ISBN
1557-170X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMBS.2008.4650286
Filename
4650286
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