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A 0.83-<formula formulatype="inline"><tex Notation="TeX">$\mu {\rm W}$</tex></formula> QRS Detection Processor Using Quadratic Spline Wavelet Transform for Wireless ECG Acquisition in 0.35-<formula formulatype="inline"> <tex Notation="TeX">$\mu{\rm m}$</tex></formula> CMOS
127
Citations
19
References
2012
Year
Concerned Ecg PartElectrophysiological EvaluationMedical ElectronicsWireless Ecg AcquisitionHealthcare Electronics CountEngineeringMeasurementWavelet AnalysisBiosignal ProcessingComputer EngineeringPatient MonitoringRaw Ecg DataHealth MonitoringWavelet TheorySignal ProcessingRadiologyHealth Sciences
Healthcare electronics count on the effectiveness of the on-patient signal preprocessing unit to moderate the wireless data transfer for better power efficiency. In order to reduce the system power in long-time ECG acquisition, this work describes an on-patient QRS detection processor for arrhythmia monitoring. It extracts the concerned ECG part, i.e., the RR-interval between the QRS complex for evaluating the heart rate variability. The processor is structured by a scale-3 quadratic spline wavelet transform followed by a maxima modulus recognition stage. The former is implemented via a symmetric FIR filter, whereas the latter includes a number of feature extraction steps: zero-crossing detection, peak (zero-derivative) detection, threshold adjustment and two finite state machines for executing the decision rules. Fabricated in 0.35-μm CMOS the 300-Hz processor draws only 0.83 μW, which is favorably comparable with the prior arts. In the system tests, the input data is placed via an on-chip 10-bit SAR analog-to-digital converter, while the output data is emitted via an off-the-shelf wireless transmitter (TI CC2500) that is configurable by the processor for different data transmission modes: 1) QRS detection result, 2) raw ECG data or 3) both. Validated with all recordings from the MIT-BIH arrhythmia database, 99.31% sensitivity and 99.70% predictivity are achieved. Mode 1 with solely the result of QRS detection exhibits 6× reduction of system power over modes 2 and 3.
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