Heart sound recording and automatic S1-S2 waves detecting system design


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Aksahin M. F., Oltu B., Karaca B. K.

JOURNAL OF THE FACULTY OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE OF GAZI UNIVERSITY, cilt.35, sa.1, ss.61-70, 2020 (SCI-Expanded) identifier identifier

Özet

The second leading cause of death in the world is cardiovascular diseases. Diagnosis of vast majority of cardiovascular diseases is made by listening to heart sounds by specialists (auscultation method). However, since the method of auscultation depends on the experience and hearing ability of the specialist, obtained results can be subjective. Therefore, digitization and visualization of heart sounds enables accurate, rapid and economical diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases, especially heart valve diseases. For this purpose, a device prototype that collects the heart sound from human body and also amplifies, filters, displays and records collected data on digital environment was designed in the first part of this study. In order to test the working accuracy of the designed device, clinical applications were carried out with the permission of the ethics committee and as the result of this application 15 heart sound recordings from 5 different disease groups(mitral insufficiency, mitral-aortic insufficiency, mitral-tricuspid insufficiency, mitral-aortic tricuspid insufficiency and healthy heart sound recordings) were collected.and obtained recordings were examined. The most effective parameter for the diagnosis of heart valve diseases is the location of the S1-S2 heart sounds. For this reason, in the second part of the study, a medical decision support system was established to detect the S1-S2 locations to assist physicians in their diagnosis. In this context, heart sounds are first filtered by discrete wavelet transform. Then, the S1-S2 waves in the filtered signal are made evident by the teager energy operator and rule-based algorithm. As a result, S1-S2 locations in normal and pathological data were detected with 98.67% sensitivity, 97.69% specificity and 98.18% accuracy.