Abstract

BackgroundElectroceuticals provide clinical solutions for a range of disorders including Parkinson's disease, cardiac arrythmias and are emerging as a potential treatment option for gastrointestinal disorders. However, pre-clinical investigations are challenged by the large stimulation artifacts registered in bio-electrical recordings. MethodA generalized framework capable of isolating and suppressing stimulation artifacts with minimal intervention was developed. Stimulation artifacts with different pulse-parameters in synthetic and experimental cardiac and gastrointestinal signals were detected using a Hampel filter and reconstructed using 3 methods: i) autoregression, ii) weighted mean, and iii) linear interpolation. ResultsSynthetic stimulation artifacts with amplitudes of 2 mV and 4 mV and pulse-widths of 50 ms, 100 ms, and 200 ms were successfully isolated and the artifact window size remained uninfluenced by the pulse-amplitude, but was influenced by pulse-width (e.g., the autoregression method resulted in an identical Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) of 1.64 mV for artifacts with 200 ms pulse-width and both 2 mV and 4 mV amplitudes). The performance of autoregression (RMSE = 1.45 ± 0.16 mV) and linear interpolation (RMSE = 1.22 ± 0.14 mV) methods were comparable and better than weighted mean (RMSE = 5.54 ± 0.56 mV) for synthetic data. However, for experimental recordings, artifact removal by autoregression was superior to both linear interpolation and weighted mean approaches in gastric, small intestinal and cardiac recordings. ConclusionsA novel signal processing framework enabled efficient analysis of bio-electrical recordings with stimulation artifacts. This will allow the bio-electrical events induced by stimulation protocols to be efficiently and systematically evaluated, resulting in improved stimulation therapies.

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