Real-time frequency-independent single-Lead and single-beat myocardial infarction detection.

Journal: Artificial intelligence in medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

This study proposes a novel real-time frequency-independent myocardial infarction detector for Lead II electrocardiograms. The underlying Deep-LSTM network is trained using the PTB-XL database, the largest to date publicly available electrocardiography dataset, and is tested over the same and the older PTB database. By testing the model over distinct datasets, collected under different conditions and from different patients, a more realistic measure of the performance can be gauged from the deployed system. The detector is trained over 3589 myocardial infarction (MI) patients and 7115 healthy controls (HC) while it is evaluated on 1076 MIs and 1840 HCs. The proposed algorithm, achieved an accuracy of 77.12%, recall/sensitivity of 75.85%, and a specificity of 83.02% over the entire PTB database; 85.07%, 81.54%, 87.31% over the PTB-XL validation set (fold 9), and 84.17%, 78.37%, 87.55% over the PTB-XL test set (fold 10). The model also achieves stable performance metrics over the frequency range of 202 Hz to 2.8 kHz. The processing time is dependent on the sampling frequency, ranging from 130 ms at 202 Hz to 1.8 s at 2.8 kHz. Such outcome is within the time required for real-time processing (less than 300 ms for fast heartbeats), between 202 Hz and 500 Hz making the algorithm practically real-time. Therefore, the proposed MI detector could be readily deployed onto existing wearable and/or portable devices and test instruments; potentially having significant societal and clinical impact in the lives of patients at risk for myocardial infarction.

Authors

  • Harold Martin
    CATE, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA. Electronic address: hmart027@fiu.edu.
  • Ulyana Morar
    CATE, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
  • Walter Izquierdo
    CATE, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
  • Mercedes Cabrerizo
  • Anastasio Cabrera
    Manatee Memorial Hospital, Bradenton, FL, USA.
  • Malek Adjouadi