DocumentCode
3377287
Title
Effects of filtering on multisite photoplethysmography pulse waveform characteristics
Author
Allen, J. ; Murray, A.
Author_Institution
Regional Med. Phys. Dept., Freeman Hosp., Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
fYear
2004
fDate
19-22 Sept. 2004
Firstpage
485
Lastpage
488
Abstract
Multisite photoplethysmography (PPG) allows pulse waveforms collected simultaneously from different peripheral body sites to be investigated. PPG waveforms are site-dependent, comprising a pulsatile (´AC´) component synchronized to each heart beat, superimposed on a slowly varying (´DC´) baseline. Careful high pass filtering of the pulses is needed to reduce the dominant lower frequencies but without distorting pulse shape, and sufficient computer quantization levels to reliably reproduce the pulse. In this study pulses were measured from the right ear, thumb and great toe of 10 healthy adult subjects. Pulses were then filtered offline at cut-off frequencies between 0.05 to 1 Hz using a digital single pole high pass filter. The relationship between filter cut-off frequency on lower to higher frequency amplitudes, AC pulse amplitude relative to system noise, and visible pulse shape distortion were investigated. The ratio of low to high frequency amplitudes decreased with increasing cut-off frequency (highest at toe, lowest at ear). The AC pulse amplitude relative to system noise increased with increasing cut-off frequency (highest at thumb, lowest at toe). A qualitative visual inspection of the waveforms showed that pulse shape distortion was likely at cut-off frequencies greater than 0.2 Hz. A single pole high pass filter cut-off frequency of 0.15 Hz for multisite PPG measurements enables faithful pulse shape reproduction for subsequent cardiovascular modelling.
Keywords
blood vessels; high-pass filters; medical signal processing; plethysmography; 0.05 to 1 Hz; AC pulse amplitude; cardiovascular modelling; filter cut-off frequencies; filtering effect; great toe; healthy adult subjects; heart beat; high pass filtering; multisite photoplethysmography; peripheral body sites; pulsatile component; pulse waveform characteristics; qualitative visual inspection; right ear; system noise; thumb; visible pulse shape distortion; Cutoff frequency; Digital filters; Distortion measurement; Ear; Filtering; Noise level; Pulse measurements; Pulse shaping methods; Shape measurement; Thumb;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computers in Cardiology, 2004
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8927-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CIC.2004.1442980
Filename
1442980
Link To Document