DocumentCode
941619
Title
S-transform applied to laser Doppler flowmetry reactive hyperemia signals
Author
Assous, Said ; Humeau, Anne ; Tartas, Maylis ; Abraham, Pierre ; L´Huillier, Jean-Pierre
Author_Institution
Groupe ISAIP-ESAIP, Saint Barthelemy D´´Anjou, France
Volume
53
Issue
6
fYear
2006
fDate
6/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1032
Lastpage
1037
Abstract
Laser Doppler flowmetry signals give information about many physiological activities of the cardiovascular system. The activities manifest themselves in rhythmic cycles. In order to explore these activities during the reactive hyperemia phenomenon, a novel time-frequency method, called the S-transform, based on a scalable Gaussian wavelet, is applied. The goal is to have a deeper understanding of reactive hyperemia. This paper focuses on the evaluation of the different activities between a rest signal and an hyperemia signal, both acquired simultaneously on the two forearms of healthy subjects. The results show that after the release of the occlusion, the myogenic, neurogenic, and endothelial related activities clearly increase on the forearm where the occlusion took place. Then, they return progressively to their basal level. However, on the rest forearm, no increase is noted for the three activities. The mechanisms that take place during reactive hyperemia are, therefore, local. The S-transform proves to be a suited time-frequency method, in order to analyze laser Doppler signal underlying mechanisms.
Keywords
Doppler measurement; blood; cardiovascular system; haemodynamics; laser applications in medicine; medical signal processing; time-frequency analysis; S-transform; cardiovascular system; endothelial related activities; laser Doppler flowmetry reactive hyperemia signals; myogenic activities; neurogenic activities; occlusion; scalable Gaussian wavelet; time-frequency method; Blood flow; Cardiovascular system; Cells (biology); Displays; Doppler shift; Ischemic pain; Light scattering; Particle scattering; Signal analysis; Time frequency analysis; Laser doppler flowmetry; S-transform; microcirculation; reactive hyperemia; time-frequency analysis; Adult; Algorithms; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Forearm; Humans; Hyperemia; Laser-Doppler Flowmetry; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Skin;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2005.863843
Filename
1634497
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