Abstract

Acute chest syndrome (ACS) is the leading cause of death among people with sickle cell disease. ACS is clinically defined and diagnosed by the presence of a new pulmonary infiltrate on chest imaging with accompanying fever and respiratory symptoms like hypoxia, tachypnea, and shortness of breath. However, the characteristic chest x-ray (CXR) findings necessary for a clinical diagnosis of ACS can be difficult to detect, as is determining which patient needs a CXR. This makes early detection difficult; but it is critical in order to limit ACS severity and subsequent fatalities. This research project looks to apply percussion and auscultation techniques that can provide an immediate diagnosis of acute pulmonary conditions by using an automated standard percussive input and electronic auscultation for computational analysis of the measured signal. Measurements on sickle cell patients having ACS, vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC), and regular clinic visits (healthy) were recorded and analyzed. Average intensity of sound transmission through the chest and lungs was determined in the ACS and healthy subject groups, revealing an average of 10–14 dB decrease in sound intensity in the ACS group compared to the healthy group. A random under-sampling boosted tree classification model identified with 94% accuracy the positive ACS and healthy observations. The analysis also revealed unique measurable changes in a small number of cases clinically classified as complicated VOC, which later developed into ACS. This suggests the developed approach may also have early predictive capability, identifying patients at risk for developing ACS prior to current clinical practice.

Highlights

  • Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a genetic disorder that affects the hemoglobin in red blood cells [1]

  • Of the 58 patients included in the subject group, there were 31 females and 27 males with an average age of 37.1 years old with a standard deviation of 12.9 years. 78 subjects were not included in the final analysis due to being recorded with a Littman stethoscope which had a markedly different response as compared to the Eko stethoscope

  • Spectral analysis of the response to an electronically recorded percussive device that includes a transmission path through lung lobes indicates a difference in sound transmission intensity in the presence of certain pulmonary infiltrates

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Summary

Introduction

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a genetic disorder that affects the hemoglobin in red blood cells [1]. SCD is one of the most common autosomal recessive disorders affecting millions all over the world, and approximately 100,000 Americans [2]. These sickled cells lyse which can cause a decrease of red blood cells (RBCs), making the person anemic, as well as obstruct narrow blood vessels causing acute pain episodes, pulmonary hypertension, acute chest syndrome and other complications [2]. ACS was precipitated by fat embolism, pulmonary infarction, and infection [3] All of these reasons present challenges for establishing early diagnosis and an optimal treatment plan

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