Abstract

In this study, the monofractal and multifractal properties of inter-beat (R-R) intervals in cardiac signals for normal and pathology classes were studied and applied to a dataset in PhysioNet which consists of 24 h R-R intervals from 54 healthy subjects (hs) and 92 patients with various diagnoses [44 with congestive heart failure (chf), 25 with atrial fibrillation (af) and 23 diagnosed with sudden death syndrome (sd)]. The results in this study indicate that the most suitable method for estimating the monofractal properties of R-R intervals is detrending moving average (DMA). The Hurst exponents ( H ) of the healthy and pathological groups, calculated using the DMA method, are shown to be statistically different by the Kruskal–Wallis test [p-value < 0.01; healthy H hs = 0.23(0.18–0.27); pathological group H chf = 0.06(0.03–0.10), H af = 0.05(0.03–0.07), H sd = 0.05(0.03–0.08)]. To study the multifractal properties of R-R intervals, the multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis was used. Formal statistical tests indicate statistically significant differences (p-value < 0.05, ANOVA and pairwise testing) between the width of the spectrum of the chf group W chf = 1.11 ± 0.12 and the width of the spectra of the af group W af = 0.58 ± 0.15, the sd group W sd = 0.60 ± 0.20, and the hs group W hs = 0.61 ± 0.08. Using these results, a logistic regression model was developed for differentiating chf from other pathologies (af and sd).

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