Abstract

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a sleep disorder that affects a large part of the population and the development of algorithms using cardiovascular features for OSAS monitoring has been an extensively researched topic in the last two decades. Several studies regarding automatic apneic event classification using ECG derived features are based on the public Apnea-ECG database available on PhysioNet. Although this database is an excellent starting point for apnea topic investigations, in our study we show that algorithms for apneic-epochs classification that are successfully trained on this database (sensitivity < 85%, false detection rate <20%) perform poorly (sensitivity\textit<55%, false detection rate < 40%) in other databases which include patients with a broader spectrum of apneic events and sleep disorders. The reduced performance can be related to the complexity of breathing events, the increased number of non-breathing related sleep events, and the presence of non-OSAS sleep pathologies.

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