DocumentCode
807757
Title
Narrowband auscultatory blood pressure measurement
Author
Sebald, Daniel J. ; Bahr, Dennis E. ; Kahn, Alan R.
Volume
49
Issue
9
fYear
2002
Firstpage
1038
Lastpage
1044
Abstract
Auscultatory blood pressure measurement uses the presence and absence of acoustic pulses generated by an artery (i.e., Korotkoff sound), detected with a stethoscope or a sensitive microphone, to noninvasively estimate systolic and diastolic pressures. Unfortunately, in high noise situations, such as ambulatory environments or when the patient moves moderately, the current auscultatory blood pressure method is unreliable, if at all possible. Empirical evidence suggests that the pulse beneath an artery occlusion travels relatively slow compared with the speed of sound. By placing two microphones along the biceps muscle near the brachial artery under the occlusion cuff, a similar blood pressure pulse appears in the two microphones with a relative time delay. The acoustic noise, on the other hand, appears in both microphones simultaneously. The contribution of this paper is to utilize this phenomenon by filtering the microphone waveforms to create spatially narrowband information signals. With a narrowband signal, the microphone signal phasing information is adequate for distinguishing between acoustic noise and the blood pressure pulse. By choosing the microphone spacing correctly, subtraction of the two signals will enhance the information signal and cancel the noise signal. The general spacing problem is also presented.
Keywords
bioacoustics; blood pressure measurement; medical signal processing; Korotkoff sound; acoustic pulses generation; artery; biceps muscle; brachial artery; diastolic pressure; general spacing problem; microphone spacing; narrowband auscultatory blood pressure measurement; occlusion cuff; signals subtraction; spatially narrowband information signals; Acoustic measurements; Acoustic noise; Acoustic pulses; Arteries; Blood pressure; Microphones; Narrowband; Pressure measurement; Pulse generation; Pulse measurements; Acoustics; Algorithms; Auscultation; Blood Pressure Determination; False Negative Reactions; False Positive Reactions; Humans; Models, Cardiovascular; Models, Theoretical; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Sphygmomanometers; Stochastic Processes;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2002.802056
Filename
1028427
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