Abstract

Developing a convenient detection method is important for diagnosing and treating obstructive sleep apnea. Considering availability and medical reliability, we established a deep-learning model that uses single-lead electrocardiogram signals for obstructive sleep apnea detection and severity assessment. The detection model consisted of signal preprocessing, feature extraction, time-frequency domain information fusion, and classification segments. A total of 375 patients who underwent polysomnography were included. The single-lead electrocardiogram signals obtained by polysomnography were used to train, validate and test the model. Moreover, the proposed model performance on a public dataset was compared with the findings of previous studies. In the test set, the accuracy of per-segment and per-recording detection were 82.55% and 85.33%, respectively. The accuracy values for mild, moderate and severe obstructive sleep apnea were 69.33%, 74.67% and 85.33%, respectively. In the public dataset, the accuracy of per-segment detection was 91.66%. A Bland-Altman plot revealed the consistency of true apnea-hypopnea index and predicted apnea-hypopnea index. We confirmed the feasibility of single-lead electrocardiogram signals and deep-learning model for obstructive sleep apnea detection and severity evaluation in both hospital and public datasets. The detection performance is high for patients with obstructive sleep apnea, especially those with severe obstructive sleep apnea.

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