Abstract

Entropy provides a valuable tool for quantifying the regularity of physiological time series and provides important insights for understanding the underlying mechanisms of the cardiovascular system. Before any entropy calculation, certain common parameters need to be initialized: embedding dimension m, tolerance threshold r and time series length N. However, no specific guideline exists on how to determine the appropriate parameter values for distinguishing congestive heart failure (CHF) from normal sinus rhythm (NSR) subjects in clinical application. In the present study, a thorough analysis on the selection of appropriate values of m, r and N for sample entropy (SampEn) and recently proposed fuzzy measure entropy (FuzzyMEn) is presented for distinguishing two group subjects. 44 long-term NRS and 29 long-term CHF RR interval recordings from http://www.physionet.org were used as the non-pathological and pathological data respectively. Extreme (>2 s) and abnormal heartbeat RR intervals were firstly removed from each RR recording and then the recording was segmented with a non-overlapping segment length N of 300 and 1000, respectively. SampEn and FuzzyMEn were performed for each RR segment under different parameter combinations: m of 1, 2, 3 and 4, and r of 0.10, 0.15, 0.20 and 0.25 respectively. The statistical significance between NSR and CHF groups under each combination of m, r and N was observed. The results demonstrated that the selection of m, r and N plays a critical role in determining the SampEn and FuzzyMEn outputs. Compared with SampEn, FuzzyMEn shows a better regularity when selecting the parameters m and r. In addition, FuzzyMEn shows a better relative consistency for distinguishing the two groups, that is, the results of FuzzyMEn in the NSR group were consistently lower than those in the CHF group while SampEn were not. The selections of m of 2 and 3 and r of 0.10 and 0.15 for SampEn and the selections of m of 1 and 2 whenever r (herein, rL = rG = r) are for FuzzyMEn (in addition to setting nL = 3 and nG = 2) were recommended to yield the fine classification results for the NSR and CHF groups.

Highlights

  • Analysis of entropy measures, typically like approximate entropy (ApEn) and sample entropy (SampEn), can provide a valuable tool for quantifying the regularity of physiological time series and provide important insights for understanding the underlying mechanisms of the cardiovascular system [1,2]

  • These parameters are critical in determining the outcomes of entropy measures, no guidelines exist for optimizing their values for distinguishing congestive heart failure (CHF) from normal sinus rhythm (NSR) subjects in clinical applications

  • There were no SampEn outputs for the NSR group for m = 4 combined with r = 0.10, 0.15 or 0.20

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Summary

Introduction

Typically like approximate entropy (ApEn) and sample entropy (SampEn), can provide a valuable tool for quantifying the regularity of physiological time series and provide important insights for understanding the underlying mechanisms of the cardiovascular system [1,2]. There are usually three unknown parameters that need to be initialized before performing entropy measures: (1) embedding dimension m, (2) tolerance threshold r, and (3) time series length N [2]. The parameter m determines the length of the vectors to be compared, r is the tolerance for accepting similar patterns between two vectors and N is the total data point number of the analyzed time series. These parameters are critical in determining the outcomes of entropy measures, no guidelines exist for optimizing their values for distinguishing congestive heart failure (CHF) from normal sinus rhythm (NSR) subjects in clinical applications. Because SampEn is regarded as a modified version of ApEn designed to solve its shortcomings, such as bias and relative inconsistency [2], these recommended values are applicable to SampEn [2,8,9,10]

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