4.6 Article

A Phonocardiographic-Based Fiber-Optic Sensor and Adaptive Filtering System for Noninvasive Continuous Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 17, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s17040890

Keywords

interferometer; fetal heart rate (fHR); maternal heart rate (mHR); EMI-free; adaptive system; Least Mean Squares (LMS) algorithm; Normalized Least Mean Square (NLMS) algorithm; fetal phonocardiography (fPCG); maternal heart sounds (mHS); fetal heart sounds (fHS)

Funding

  1. Technology Agency of the Czech Republic [TA04021263]
  2. Ministry of Education of the Czech Republic [SP2017/128, SP2017/79]
  3. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic - European Structural Funds [CZ.1.07/2.3.00/20.0217]
  4. state budget of the Czech Republic
  5. Ministry of the Interior of the Czech Republic [VI20152020008, VI2VS/444]
  6. COST action [MP1401]
  7. Ministry of Industry and Trade of the Czech Republic [FV 10396]

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This paper focuses on the design, realization, and verification of a novel phonocardiographic-based fiber-optic sensor and adaptive signal processing system for noninvasive continuous fetal heart rate (fHR) monitoring. Our proposed system utilizes two Mach-Zehnder interferometeric sensors. Based on the analysis of real measurement data, we developed a simplified dynamic model for the generation and distribution of heart sounds throughout the human body. Building on this signal model, we then designed, implemented, and verified our adaptive signal processing system by implementing two stochastic gradient-based algorithms: the Least Mean Square Algorithm (LMS), and the Normalized Least Mean Square (NLMS) Algorithm. With this system we were able to extract the fHR information from high quality fetal phonocardiograms (fPCGs), filtered from abdominal maternal phonocardiograms (mPCGs) by performing fPCG signal peak detection. Common signal processing methods such as linear filtering, signal subtraction, and others could not be used for this purpose as fPCG and mPCG signals share overlapping frequency spectra. The performance of the adaptive system was evaluated by using both qualitative (gynecological studies) and quantitative measures such as: Signal-to-Noise Ratio-SNR, Root Mean Square Error-RMSE, Sensitivity-S+, and Positive Predictive Value-PPV.

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