Abstract

Contactless measurements during the night by a 3-D-camera are less time-consuming in comparison to polysomnography because they do not require sophisticated wiring. However, it is not clear what might be the diagnostic benefit and accuracy of this technology. We investigated 59 persons simultaneously by polysomnography and 3-D-camera and visual perceptive computing (19 patients with restless legs syndrome (RLS), 21 patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), and 19 healthy volunteers). There was a significant correlation between the apnea hypopnea index (AHI) measured by polysomnography and respiratory events measured with the 3-D-camera in OSA patients (r = 0.823; p < 0.001). The receiver operating characteristic curve yielded a sensitivity of 90% for OSA with a specificity of 71.4%. In RLS patients 72.8% of leg movements confirmed by polysomnography could be detected by 3-D-video and a significant moderate correlation was found between PLM measured by polysomnography and by the 3-D-camera (RLS: r = 0.654; p = 0.004). In total, 95.4% of the sleep epochs were correctly classified by the machine learning approach, but only 32.5% of awake epochs. Further studies should investigate, if this technique might be an alternative to home sleep testing in persons with an increased pre-test probability for OSA.

Highlights

  • Contactless measurements during the night by a 3-D-camera are less time-consuming in comparison to polysomnography because they do not require sophisticated wiring

  • Contactless motion analysis using the Kinect 3-D-camera and subsequent visual perceptive computing (VPC) is an effective diagnostic instrument for measuring gait impairment in patients suffering from multiple sclerosis, tremor in Parkinson patients, fall risk assessment of elders, gesture commands, body sway and posture, anthropomorphic measurements for example for surgical planning, epileptic seizure semiology and even contactless heart rate measurement[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]

  • Apnea hypopnea index in the polysomnography versus respiratory events measured with the Kinect

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Summary

Introduction

Contactless measurements during the night by a 3-D-camera are less time-consuming in comparison to polysomnography because they do not require sophisticated wiring. It is not clear what might be the diagnostic benefit and accuracy of this technology. We investigated 59 persons simultaneously by polysomnography and 3-D-camera and visual perceptive computing (19 patients with restless legs syndrome (RLS), 21 patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), and 19 healthy volunteers). The aim of this study was to investigate whether VPC could i) be a home-based measurement for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) comparable to home sleep testing (HST), ii) detect PLM, and iii) differentiate between sleep and wake

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