Abstract

Fetal movement is an important biological index of fetal well-being. Since 2008, we have been developing an original capacitive acceleration sensor and device that a pregnant woman can easily use to record fetal movement by herself at home during sleep. In this study, we report a newly developed automated software system for analyzing recorded fetal movement. This study will introduce the system and compare its results to those of a manual analysis of the same fetal movement signals (Experiment I). We will also demonstrate an appropriate way to use the system (Experiment II). In Experiment I, fetal movement data reported previously for six pregnant women at 28-38 gestational weeks were used. We evaluated the agreement of the manual and automated analyses for the same 10-sec epochs using prevalence-adjusted bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) including quantitative indicators for prevalence and bias. The mean PABAK value was 0.83, which can be considered almost perfect. In Experiment II, twelve pregnant women at 24-36 gestational weeks recorded fetal movement at night once every four weeks. Overall, mean fetal movement counts per hour during maternal sleep significantly decreased along with gestational weeks, though individual differences in fetal development were noted. This newly developed automated analysis system can provide important data throughout late pregnancy.

Highlights

  • Fetal movement is an important biological index of fetal well-being

  • In 2012, we developed a new and original recording device based on fetal movement acceleration measurement (FMAM) [11]

  • In the 2012 study, we demonstrated that gross movement recorded by the FMAM showed a high agreement with that made by ultrasonography

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Summary

Introduction

Fetal movement is an important biological index of fetal well-being. Mothers can feel fetal movement starting at about 20 gestational weeks. Absence of maternal perception of fetal movement is one symptom of fetal death, and a reduction in fetal movement is an alarming sign of fetal compromise [1, 2]. In order to evaluate fetal well-being, Manning et al proposed a fetal biophysical profile for use during ultrasound imaging [3]. That profile included fetal movement parameters, and the profile is widely used.

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