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Enabling Continuous Breathing-Phase Contextualization via Wearable-Based Impedance Pneumography and Lung Sounds: A Feasibility Study.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Sanchez-Perez, JA; Gazi, AH; Mabrouk, SA; Berkebile, JA; Ozmen, GC; Kamaleswaran, R; Inan, OT
Published in: IEEE J Biomed Health Inform
December 2023

Chronic respiratory diseases affect millions and are leading causes of death in the US and worldwide. Pulmonary auscultation provides clinicians with critical respiratory health information through the study of Lung Sounds (LS) and the context of the breathing-phase and chest location in which they are measured. Existing auscultation technologies, however, do not enable the simultaneous measurement of this context, thereby potentially limiting computerized LS analysis. In this work, LS and Impedance Pneumography (IP) measurements were obtained from 10 healthy volunteers while performing normal and forced-expiratory (FE) breathing maneuvers using our wearable IP and respiratory sounds (WIRS) system. Simultaneous auscultation was performed with the Eko CORE stethoscope (EKO). The breathing-phase context was extracted from the IP signals and used to compute phase-by-phase (Inspiratory (I), expiratory (E), and their ratio (I:E)) and breath-by-breath acoustic features. Their individual and added value was then elucidated through machine learning analysis. We found that the phase-contextualized features effectively captured the underlying acoustic differences between deep and FE breaths, yielding a maximum F1 Score of 84.1 ±11.4% with the phase-by-phase features as the strongest contributors to this performance. Further, the individual phase-contextualized models outperformed the traditional breath-by-breath models in all cases. The validity of the results was demonstrated for the LS obtained with WIRS, EKO, and their combination. These results suggest that incorporating breathing-phase context may enhance computerized LS analysis. Hence, multimodal sensing systems that enable this, such as WIRS, have the potential to advance LS clinical utility beyond traditional manual auscultation and improve patient care.

Duke Scholars

Published In

IEEE J Biomed Health Inform

DOI

EISSN

2168-2208

Publication Date

December 2023

Volume

27

Issue

12

Start / End Page

5734 / 5744

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Wearable Electronic Devices
  • Respiratory Sounds
  • Respiration
  • Humans
  • Feasibility Studies
  • Electric Impedance
  • Auscultation
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Sanchez-Perez, J. A., Gazi, A. H., Mabrouk, S. A., Berkebile, J. A., Ozmen, G. C., Kamaleswaran, R., & Inan, O. T. (2023). Enabling Continuous Breathing-Phase Contextualization via Wearable-Based Impedance Pneumography and Lung Sounds: A Feasibility Study. IEEE J Biomed Health Inform, 27(12), 5734–5744. https://doi.org/10.1109/JBHI.2023.3319381
Sanchez-Perez, Jesus Antonio, Asim H. Gazi, Samer A. Mabrouk, John A. Berkebile, Goktug C. Ozmen, Rishikesan Kamaleswaran, and Omer T. Inan. “Enabling Continuous Breathing-Phase Contextualization via Wearable-Based Impedance Pneumography and Lung Sounds: A Feasibility Study.IEEE J Biomed Health Inform 27, no. 12 (December 2023): 5734–44. https://doi.org/10.1109/JBHI.2023.3319381.
Sanchez-Perez JA, Gazi AH, Mabrouk SA, Berkebile JA, Ozmen GC, Kamaleswaran R, et al. Enabling Continuous Breathing-Phase Contextualization via Wearable-Based Impedance Pneumography and Lung Sounds: A Feasibility Study. IEEE J Biomed Health Inform. 2023 Dec;27(12):5734–44.
Sanchez-Perez, Jesus Antonio, et al. “Enabling Continuous Breathing-Phase Contextualization via Wearable-Based Impedance Pneumography and Lung Sounds: A Feasibility Study.IEEE J Biomed Health Inform, vol. 27, no. 12, Dec. 2023, pp. 5734–44. Pubmed, doi:10.1109/JBHI.2023.3319381.
Sanchez-Perez JA, Gazi AH, Mabrouk SA, Berkebile JA, Ozmen GC, Kamaleswaran R, Inan OT. Enabling Continuous Breathing-Phase Contextualization via Wearable-Based Impedance Pneumography and Lung Sounds: A Feasibility Study. IEEE J Biomed Health Inform. 2023 Dec;27(12):5734–5744.

Published In

IEEE J Biomed Health Inform

DOI

EISSN

2168-2208

Publication Date

December 2023

Volume

27

Issue

12

Start / End Page

5734 / 5744

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Wearable Electronic Devices
  • Respiratory Sounds
  • Respiration
  • Humans
  • Feasibility Studies
  • Electric Impedance
  • Auscultation