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The Integral Pulse Frequency Modulation Model With Time-Varying Threshold: Application to Heart Rate Variability Analysis During Exercise Stress Testing
109
Citations
32
References
2010
Year
Physical ActivityMedical MonitoringEngineeringWearable TechnologyBiomedical Signal AnalysisElectrophysiological EvaluationKinesiologyExercisePatient MonitoringApplied PhysiologyBiostatisticsClinical ExerciseCardiologyCardiac MechanicHealth SciencesExercise Stress TestingAutonomic SystemExercise StressPhysical FitnessClinical Exercise PhysiologyCardiovascular ReactivityIpfm ModelSignal ProcessingHuman PhysiologyExercise ScienceExercise PhysiologyPhysiologyElectromyographyHealth MonitoringElectrophysiologyTime-varying Threshold
In this paper, an approach for heart rate variability analysis during exercise stress testing is proposed based on the integral pulse frequency modulation (IPFM) model, where a time-varying threshold is included to account for the nonstationary mean heart rate. The proposed technique allows the estimation of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) modulating signal using the methods derived for the IPFM model with constant threshold plus a correction, which is shown to be needed to take into account the time-varying mean heart rate. On simulations, this technique allows the estimation of the ANS modulation on the heart from the beat occurrence time series with lower errors than the IPFM model with constant threshold (1.1% ± 1.3% versus 15.0% ± 14.9%). On an exercise stress testing database, the ANS modulation estimated by the proposed technique is closer to physiology than that obtained from the IPFM model with constant threshold, which tends to overestimate the ANS modulation during the recovery and underestimate it during the initial rest.
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