Feasibility of shock advice analysis during CPR through removal of CPR artefacts from the human ECG

Mechanical activity from chest compressions and ventilations during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) introduces artefact components into the electrocardiogram (ECG). CPR must therefore be discontinued for reliable shock advice analysis in automated external defibrillators. Reducing or eliminating...

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Veröffentlicht in:Resuscitation 2004-05, Vol.61 (2), p.131-141
Hauptverfasser: Eilevstjønn, Joar, Eftestøl, Trygve, Aase, Sven Ole, Myklebust, Helge, Husøy, John Håkon, Steen, Petter Andreas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mechanical activity from chest compressions and ventilations during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) introduces artefact components into the electrocardiogram (ECG). CPR must therefore be discontinued for reliable shock advice analysis in automated external defibrillators. Reducing or eliminating this detrimental “hands-off” time by removing the CPR artefacts, should significantly improve the defibrillation success rate. The feasibility of this was tested by removing the CPR artefacts using a multichannel adaptive filter, the multichannel recursive adaptive matching pursuit (MC-RAMP) algorithm. Human ECG and reference channel data from episodes with both shockable and non-shockable underlying heart rhythms were recorded from 105 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The performance of a shock advice algorithm was evaluated before and after artefact removal using the MC-RAMP algorithm. From a test set consisting of 92 shockable and 174 non-shockable episodes a sensitivity of 96.7% and specificity of 79.9% was achieved, an increase of approximately 15 and 13%, respectively, compared to no filtering. Good sensitivity was achieved, enabling ECG analysis during CPR that would reduce the hands-off time on patients with shockable rhythms. However, CPR artefact removal on non-shockable rhythms proved a more difficult problem. We need a better understanding of the physiological mixing of artefacts and the underlying heart rhythm and suggest clinical trials to investigate the nature of CPR artefacts further. Durante a Reanimação Cardio-pulmonar (CPR) a actividade mecânica das compressões torácicas e ventilação interfere no registo do electrocardiograma (ECG). A RCP tem de ser interrompida para que o desfibrilhador faça a análise adequada na desfibrilhação automática externa. A redução ou eliminação deste tempo “sem mãos a reanimar” eliminando as interferências da CPR deve melhorar de forma significativa a taxa de sucesso da reanimação. A exequibilidade deste método foi testada removendo os artefactos de CPR usando um filtro adaptativo com multicanais, o algoritmo “Multichannel Recursivo Adaptive Matching Pursuit (MC-RAMP)”. Foram registados ECG e dados de canais de referência de episódios de ritmos cardı́acos desfibrilháveis e não desfibrilháveis de 105 vı́timas de paragem cardı́aca extra-hospitalar. Foi avaliado o desempenho de um algoritmo que recomenda desfibrilhação, antes e após eliminação das interferências, utilizando o algoritmo MC-RAMP. A partir
ISSN:0300-9572
1873-1570
DOI:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2003.12.019