Abstract

An electrocardiogram (ECG) signal is usually contaminated with various noises, such as baseline-wander, power-line interference, and electromyogram (EMG) noise. Denoising must be performed to extract meaningful information from ECG signals for clinical detection of heart diseases. This work is focused on baseline-wander noise as it shares the same frequency spectrum as the ST segment of ECG signals. Hence, it is important to estimate the baseline-wander prior to its removal from ECG signals. This paper presents a method for classifying each segment of the ECG signal’s baseline-wander as minimal, moderate or large. We use the C4.5 decision tree algorithm to model the classifier using the WEKA data-mining tool. We test the proposed method on ECG signals obtained from the MIT-BIH arrhythmia database (48 ECG recordings, each slightly longer than 30 min). We use 36 ECG recordings for training the classifier with the remaining 12 ECG recordings as the test data for classification. We partition each recording into 5 second, non-overlapping segments, which result in 361 segments for each record. The classification results show that the model classifier achieves an average sensitivity of 97.36 %, specificity of 99.50 %, and overall accuracy of 98.89 % in classifying the baseline-wander noise in ECG signals. The proposed method effectively addresses the question of identifying the minimal baseline-wander segments. Moreover, the proposed framework may help in devising an algorithm for the selective filtering of moderate and large baseline-wander segments to achieve the best trade-off between accuracy and computational cost.

Highlights

  • Electrocardiogram (ECG) is an important clinical tool that provides cardiac information for the early diagnosis of cardiac diseases

  • The proposed methodology is tested on real ECG signals taken from the MIT-BIH arrhythmia database

  • We present a novel method for the classification of baseline-wander noise in ECG signals

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Summary

Introduction

Electrocardiogram (ECG) is an important clinical tool that provides cardiac information for the early diagnosis of cardiac diseases. A typical ECG signal consists of a P wave, QRS-complex wave, and T wave [1]. By extracting the morphological features of ECG signals, heart rate variability and cardiac diseases can be detected. Manuscript received November, 2018; accepted April, 2019. The authors are grateful for this support

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