Abstract

Photoplethysmographic (PPG) waveforms are used to acquire pulse rate (PR) measurements from pulsatile arterial blood volume. PPG waveforms are highly susceptible to motion artifacts (MA), limiting the implementation of PR measurements in mobile physiological monitoring devices. Previous studies have shown that multichannel photoplethysmograms can successfully acquire diverse signal information during simple, repetitive motion, leading to differences in motion tolerance across channels. In this paper, we investigate the performance of a custom-built multichannel forehead-mounted photoplethysmographic sensor under a variety of intense motion artifacts. We introduce an advanced multichannel template-matching algorithm that chooses the channel with the least motion artifact to calculate PR for each time instant. We show that for a wide variety of random motion, channels respond differently to motion artifacts, and the multichannel estimate outperforms single-channel estimates in terms of motion tolerance, signal quality, and PR errors. We have acquired 31 data sets consisting of PPG waveforms corrupted by random motion and show that the accuracy of PR measurements achieved was increased by up to 2.7 bpm when the multichannel-switching algorithm was compared to individual channels. The percentage of PR measurements with error ≤ 5 bpm during motion increased by 18.9% when the multichannel switching algorithm was compared to the mean PR from all channels. Moreover, our algorithm enables automatic selection of the best signal fidelity channel at each time point among the multichannel PPG data.

Highlights

  • Pulse oximetry uses light absorption to measure arterial blood oxygen saturation (SpO2 ) and pulse rate (PR) from photoplethysmographic (PPG) signals

  • The accelerometer amplitude is a good indication of the level of motion introduced, but is indirectly related to the motion artifact introduced into the corrupted PPG waveform

  • We found that the multichannel approach shows the most improvement when channels differ significantly in signal quality and morphology, resulting in a high variance of Multichannel noise level (MCNL) values during motion

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Pulse oximetry uses light absorption to measure arterial blood oxygen saturation (SpO2 ) and pulse rate (PR) from photoplethysmographic (PPG) signals. Any transient motion of the sensor relative to the skin, such as during exercise, can cause a significant artifact in the optical measurement. If these artifacts mimic a heartbeat, the instrument may not be able to differentiate between the pulsations that are due to motion artifacts (MA) and normal arterial pulsations, thereby distorting the PPG waveforms and causing false or erroneous PR readings. The primary cause of MA in pulse oximetry is predominantly due to changes in the light path during sensor movements [1].

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call