The following relates generally to the cardiac care arts, medical emergency response arts, and so forth.
Numerous clinical scenarios may arise which might, or might not, be indicative of cardiac deterioration, such as a patient having one or more of the symptoms: feeling dizzy; physical weakness; rapid or irregular heartbeats; shortness of breath; discomfort in the chest; or so forth. Such symptoms are common cardiovascular disease symptoms of patients with potential risks for cardiac arrest, or acute heart attack, or acute heart failure when the symptoms are severe, or for irregular heart rhythm, or coronary artery disease when the symptoms are less severe. Typical situations in which cardiac deterioration is more likely to be present include patients being transported by an ambulance, or admitted to an emergency department of a hospital, or a hospitalized patient after a knee replacement surgery or other surgical or other stressful medical procedure.
Early detection and diagnosis of cardiac deterioration has a significant impact on the ultimate success or failure of cardiac care. Cardiac deterioration mechanisms directly associated with the cardiac muscle include, for example: myocardial ischemia (a reduction in blood flow/oxygenation of the heart), left ventricular hypertrophy (muscle buildup in the left ventricular wall, usually resulting from chronic excessive cardiac effort due to high blood pressure or another condition), systolic heart failure (deterioration in ventricular performance during systolic pumping action, usually correlating with low ejection fraction), and diastolic heart failure (deterioration in ventricular performance during diastole relaxation, usually correlating with low stroke volume). Other cardiac deterioration mechanisms relate to the vasculature servicing the heart, such as valve degradation, or plaque build-up which can lead to stenosis. The appropriate treatment depends upon which of these various cardiac deterioration mechanisms (or combination of mechanisms) is present. Many of these cardiac deterioration mechanisms, if left untreated, can lead to acute debilitating or life-threatening medical events such as cardiac arrest, acute heart attack, acute heart failure, irregular heart rhythm, coronary artery disease, or the like.
Numerous specialized medical tests have been developed to diagnose cardiac deterioration. In practice, however, these are often not ordered for a given patient until the cardiac deterioration has reached an advanced state and has become manifestly symptomatic. Moreover, interpretation of various cardiac tests is difficult, and in the early stages of cardiac deterioration the physician seeing the patient is often not a trained cardiologist but rather a general practice (GP) physician and/or a physician specializing in some other area.
The following discloses a new and improved systems and methods that address the above referenced issues, and others.
In one disclosed aspect, a patient monitor is disclosed, comprising a display component, a plurality of sensors reading vital signs of a human subject including at one cardiovascular parameter and at least one respiratory parameter, and a microprocessor or microcontroller programmed to perform a cardiovascular early warning scoring (cEWS) method. The cEWS method includes the operations of: (i) classifying the human subject using a plurality of cardiovascular deterioration classifiers each trained to classify the human subject respective to a different type of cardiovascular deterioration to generate cardiovascular early warning scores for the different types of cardiovascular deterioration, the plurality of cardiovascular deterioration classifiers operating on a set of inputs characterizing the human subject including the at least one cardiovascular parameter and the at least one respiratory parameter read by the plurality of sensors; and (ii) outputting the cardiovascular early warning scores for the different types of cardiovascular deterioration on the display component of the patient monitor. The set of inputs may include the at least one cardiovascular parameter read by electrocardiograph electrodes and the at least one respiratory parameter comprising tidal volume read by an airflow sensor.
In another disclosed aspect, a non-transitory storage medium stores instructions readable and executable by a patient monitor comprising a plurality of sensors, a display component, and a microprocessor or microcontroller to perform a myocardial ischemia early warning method as follows. Vital sign data for a human subject are acquired using the plurality of sensors. The human subject is classified to generate an empirical myocardial ischemia score using an empirical myocardial ischemia classifier trained on a labeled data set representing training subjects with each training subject i represented by a vector
One advantage resides in facilitating early diagnosis of cardiovascular deterioration, and facilitating early identification of the type of cardiovascular deterioration.
Another advantage resides in providing early diagnosis of myocardial ischemia.
Another advantage resides in providing the foregoing while leveraging and providing the context of a rules-based diagnosis that is heuristic in nature.
Another advantage resides in synergistically combining multiple automated pathways to provide more accurate diagnosis of cardiovascular deterioration.
A given embodiment may provide none, one, two, more, or all of the foregoing advantages, and/or may provide other advantages as will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon reading and understanding the present disclosure.
The invention may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various steps and arrangements of steps. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating the preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
With reference to
The sensors 20, 22, 24 acquire vital sign data in real-time (i.e. continuously, or by sampling with a relatively fast sampling rate) with the vital sign data being optionally processed by algorithms running on the microprocessor or microcontroller of the patient monitor 12. For example, the patient monitor 12 may execute algorithms to generate ECG lead traces from measured voltages of the ECG electrodes 20 and to extract information from the ECG lead traces such as heart rate and presence/absence of associated rate abnormalities (e.g. tachycardia, bradycardia, may use age- and/or gender-specific limits), heart rate variability, QT interval, presence/absence of various arrhythmias such as atrial (AFib), supraventricular tachycardia (SVT), increased QT interval (long QTc), or so forth. The patient monitor 12 may execute algorithms to process the airflow data acquired by the airflow sensor 24 to extract information such as respiratory rate and tidal volume. As another example, the patient monitor 12 may execute algorithms to process a peripheral plethysmograph waveform acquired by the pulse oximeter to derive saturation of peripheral oxygen (SpO2) and heart rate data.
The vital sign sensors 20, 22, 24 are merely illustrative, and additional or other vital sign sensors are contemplated, such as a blood pressure cuff, sphygmomanometer, or other blood pressure sensor or sensors. The patient monitor 12 may process blood pressure date to extract systolic and diastolic blood pressure, with high- or low-blood pressure limits defined that may again be age- and/or gender-specific. Furthermore, if the illustrative mask 26 is part of a mechanical ventilation system (that is, the patient 10 is mechanically ventilated) then other ventilator data additional to the previously mentioned respiration rate and tidal volume may be available and suitably input to the patient monitor 12.
With brief reference to
With reference back to
The illustrative patient monitor 12 further includes a cardiovascular deterioration early warning scoring (cEWS) (sub-)system 40 that is diagrammatically depicted in
Additionally, the cEWS system 40 receives at least one respiratory parameter 44, such as respiratory rate, tidal volume, or so forth. The illustrative cEWS system 40 also receives at least one gas exchange parameter 46, such as SpO2 from the pulse oximeter 22, or PaO2 and/or PaCO2 values from blood gas analysis, or so forth. It is recognized herein that these additional parameters 44, 46, although not characterizing the cardiovascular system directly, are of value in assessing cardiovascular deterioration because the respiratory and gas exchange systems characterize the pulmonary system which together with the cardiovascular system forms an integrated cardiopulmonary system.
The cEWS system 40 comprises a plurality of cardiovascular deterioration classifiers (i.e. inference engines) 50, one for each type of cardiovascular deterioration of interest. The illustrative cEWS system 40 includes a myocardial ischemia classifier 52, a left ventricular hypertrophy classifier 54, a systolic heart failure classifier 56, and a diastolic heart failure classifier 58. There are merely illustrative, and classifiers trained to detect other types of cardiovascular deterioration such as cardiac valve deterioration, low cardiac output, cardiac arterial stenosis, or so forth are additionally or alternatively contemplated. Each classifier 52, 54, 56, 58 may, for example, be a neural network, support vector machine, a nonlinear regression model (e.g. logistic or polynomial regression), or other type of classifier. It will be appreciated that the classifiers 52, 54, 56, 58 may in general be of different types.
In general, each classifier 52, 54, 56, 58 is trained using a labeled data set {(
The trained classifiers 52, 54, 56, 58 are applied to the patient 10, who is not one of the training patients, and for whom the status of cardiac deterioration (if any) is not known a priori. In applying the classifiers 52, 54, 56, 58 to the patient 10, the patient data 42, 44, 46 are formulated in the same manner as the training patient data vectors
In some embodiments, the prediction outputs may be tied to clinical guidelines used by the ER, EMS, or other medical provider. For example, in an EMS call setting, if the myocardial ischemia score is sufficiently high the output may (in addition to identifying a probable ischemia condition) present the ischemia therapy called for in the clinical guideline for treating ischemia.
It is contemplated that the classifiers 52, 54, 56, 58 may be re-trained occasionally to more accurately reflect current patient demographics.
The use in the cEWS system 40 of the plurality of classifiers 52, 54, 56, 58, one for each type of cardiac deterioration of interest, recognizes that different types of cardiac deterioration, though somewhat interrelated, have distinct characteristics, so that a single classifier would be unlikely to be effective. The output predictions ŷ of the set of classifiers 52, 54, 56, 58 may be variously combined and/or presented as one or more cardiovascular early warning scores 60. In one approach, only the highest (i.e. most severe) prediction (score) is presented, and then only if that highest prediction is higher than some threshold. This approach is particularly advantageous in a setting such as an emergency room (ER) or emergency medical service (EMS) call, where medical personnel are dealing with a triage situation and need to be made aware of only the most severe condition. In a variant approach also suitable for triage situations, each classifier score is presented individually but only if its value (i.e. severity) is greater than some (possibly type-specific) threshold. To reduce the information that needs to be processed by emergency medical personnel, it is further contemplated to present the predictions (scores) in some discretized fashion, for example a value of “HIGH” or “MODERATE” depending on the score. Other readily perceived formats are contemplated, such as displaying each prediction as a slider or scale running (for example), with the low end labeled to indicate no likelihood of that type of cardiac deterioration and the high end labeled to indicate a high likelihood of that type of cardiac deterioration. Color coding may also be used, e.g. displaying high scores in red, moderate scores in yellow, and low scores in green. The scores are suitably displayed on the display 14 of the patient monitor 12, although other outputs are contemplated such as an audible alarm in the case of a very high score. In embodiments suited for non-emergency situations, it is contemplated to present all cEWS values, e.g. as percent probabilities or other numerical values. More generally, the cEWS values can be used for continuous monitoring, for example displayed as a trend line, numeric values updated in real time, or so forth in an ambulance or other mobile emergency response setting, at the hospital room bedside, at a nurses' station, or so forth.
The cEWS system 40 diagrammatically shown in
One possible difficulty with the cEWS system 40 of
With reference to
In the approach of
In one illustrative implementation, of the myocardial ischemia detector of
The ischemia classifier 52, already described with reference to
The rules-based ischemia detector 160 is a codification of the heuristic rules used by the physician in performing ischemia detection. The rules can be codified using a fuzzy inference engine where heuristic rules are translated into mathematical formulation giving crisp features to be selected. Some suitable rules that could be implemented via the rules-based ischemia detector 160 include the aforementioned 2013 ACC/AHA guideline, and/or the AHA/ACCF/HRS Recommendations for the Standardization and Interpretation of the Electrocardiogram Part VI: Acute Ischemia/Infarction (Circulation. 2009; 119:e262-e27). In typical guidelines for cardiovascular deterioration, the guidelines rely upon cardiovascular parameters, but typically not on respiratory or gas exchange parameters. Accordingly, the illustrative rules-based ischemia detector 160 receives as input the cardiovascular parameters 42 but not the at least one respiratory parameter 44 and not the at least one gas exchange parameter 46. (However, it is also contemplated for the rules-based ischemia detector to employ rules additionally operating on respiratory and/or gas exchange parameter(s)).
The physiological model component 162 comprises static (algebraic) and/or dynamic (differential) equations that articulate ischemic deterioration of the myocardium. This knowledge is obtained from the pathophysiological understanding of myocardial ischemia. The knowledge is then expressed mathematically. Typical physiological models of cardiovascular deterioration rely upon cardiovascular parameters, but typically not on respiratory or gas exchange parameters. Accordingly, the illustrative physiological model-based detector 162 receives as input the cardiovascular parameters 42 but not the at least one respiratory parameter 44 and not the at least one gas exchange parameter 46. (However, it is also contemplated for the physiological model-based detector to employ rules additionally operating on respiratory and/or gas exchange parameter(s)).
The outputs of the three detectors 52, 160, 162 are updated at each instance that a patient data record is presented/updated. Each detector 52, 160, 162 outputs an assessment (i.e. score) estimating the onset of ischemia. The three outputs are then aggregated via the scores combiner 164 to generate the ischemia score value 166. In some embodiments, the scores combiner 164 normalizes the input and output to produce the ischemia score 166 in the range [0%,100%] where a score of 0% indicates lowest estimated likelihood/severity of cardiac ischemia, while 100% represents highest likelihood/severity of cardiac ischemia. The ischemia score 166 may, in general, evolve over time as parameters such as heart rate, respiration rate, tidal volume, blood pressure, and so forth are updated by readings of the sensors 20, 22, 24 and/or as other inputs such as blood gas analysis results are input to the system.
The weights for the scores output by the respective detectors 52, 160, 162 are suitably determined (or fine-tuned) during the training phase by optimizing the fit between the output 166 and the annotated labels yi pertaining to cardiac ischemia. The scores combiner 164 may employ a simple weighted average or weighted sum of the outputs of the constituent ischemia detectors 52, 160, 162. In other embodiments, the scores combiner 164 performs the weighted aggregation using a more sophisticated technique such as Linear Discriminator Analysis (LDA) to provide the single value 166 of ischemia detection.
As already mentioned, the output 166 may be employed in the context of the cEWS system 40 of
While the aggregate score 166 is expected to be more accurate than the individual outputs of the respective ischemia detector components 52, 160, 162, it is also contemplated to display the outputs of the individual ischemia detector components 52, 160, 162, for example using one of the above-mentioned binary, color coded, numeric, and/or trend line representations.
While illustrative
It will be appreciated that the disclosed cardiovascular deterioration early warning system cEWS system 40, and/or the constituent classifiers 52, 54, 56, 58, 152 or stand-alone modality detector 152, may also be embodied as a non-transitory storage medium storing instructions readable and executable by the microprocessor or microcontroller of the patient monitor 12, or by another electronic data processing device, to perform the disclosed cardiovascular deterioration detection operations. Such a non-transitory storage medium may, by way of illustration, include: a hard disk drive or other magnetic storage medium; an optical disk or other optical storage medium; a read-only memory (ROM), electronically programmable read-only-memory (PROM), flash memory or other electronic storage medium; various combinations thereof; and so forth.
The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Modifications and alterations may occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2016/051997 | 4/8/2016 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62144372 | Apr 2015 | US |