Abstract

Arterial blood pressure (ABP) is an important vital sign from which it can be extracted valuable information about the subject’s health. After studying its morphology it is possible to diagnose cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension, so ABP routine control is recommended. The most common method of controlling ABP is the cuff-based method, from which it is obtained only the systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP, respectively). This paper proposes a cuff-free method to estimate the morphology of the average ABP pulse () through a deep learning model based on a seq2seq architecture with attention mechanism. It only needs raw photoplethysmogram signals (PPG) from the finger and includes the capacity to integrate both categorical and continuous demographic information (DI). The experiments were performed on more than 1100 subjects from the MIMIC database for which their corresponding age and gender were consulted. Without allowing the use of data from the same subjects to train and test, the mean absolute errors (MAE) were 6.57 ± 0.20 and 14.39 ± 0.42 mmHg for DBP and SBP, respectively. For , R correlation coefficient and the MAE were 0.98 ± 0.001 and 8.89 ± 0.10 mmHg. In summary, this methodology is capable of transforming PPG into an ABP pulse, which obtains better results when DI of the subjects is used, potentially useful in times when wireless devices are becoming more popular.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCardiovascular diseases (CVDs) remain the most common cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide [1]

  • Published: 19 March 2021Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) remain the most common cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide [1]

  • The measurement is carried out by a physician or different members of a clinical staff, and the subject to be measured rests for a few minutes in order to stabilize his blood pressure (BP). As it depends on an inflatable cuff, it does not serve as a continuous measurement method due to only two values are obtained: diastolic BP (DBP) and systolic BP (SBP)

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) remain the most common cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide [1]. One of its main risk factors which reaches at least 1.3 billion people is high blood pressure (BP) or hypertension [2]. Most of the population is not aware of suffering a CVD until an event such as arrhythmia, heart attack, or stroke occurs. In this context, regular BP monitoring becomes an essential strategy of prevention, detection, and control for health

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