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Journal ArticleDOI

Automatic Measurement of End-Diastolic Arterial Lumen Diameter in ARTSENS

TL;DR: A novel approach using the autocorrelation of echoes from opposite walls of the artery has been discussed, to bring down the curve fitting time and facilitate processing on low-end processors.
Abstract: Over past few years, we are developing a system for facilitating large scale screening of patients for cardiovascular risk - ARTSENS. ARTSENS is an image-free device that uses a single element ultrasound transducer to obtain non-invasive measurements of arterial stiffness (AS) in a fully automated manner. AS is directly proportional to end-diastolic lumen diameter (�� �� ). Multi- layered structure of the arterial walls and indistinct characteristics of intima-lumen interface (ILI) makes it quite difficult to accurately estimate �� �� in A-Mode radio-frequency (RF) frames obtained from ARTSENS. In this paper, we propose a few methods based on fitting simple mathematical models to the echoes from arterial walls, followed by a novel method to fuse the information from curve fitting error and distension curve to arrive at an accurate measure of �� ��. To bring down the curve fitting time and facilitate processing on low-end processors, a novel approach using the autocorrelation of echoes from opposite walls of the artery has been discussed. The methods were analyzed for their comparative accuracy against reference �� �� obtained from 85 human volunteers using Hitachi-Aloka eTRACKING system. �� �� from all reported methods show strong and statistically significant positive correlation with eTRACKING and mean error of less than 7 % could be achieved. As expected, �� �� from all methods show significant positive correlation with age.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The feasibility of calibration-free, cuffless BP measurement at an arterial site of interest was demonstrated with a level of acceptable accuracy and the potential utility of the proposed method and system in hypertension screening and local evaluation of arterial stiffness indices was demonstrated.
Abstract: Objective: We propose a calibration-free method and system for cuffless blood pressure (BP) measurement from superficial arteries. A prototype device with bi-modal probe arrangement was designed and developed to estimate carotid BP – an indicator of central aortic pressure. Methods: Mathematical models relating BP parameters of an arterial segment to its dimensions and local pulse wave velocity (PWV) are introduced. A bi-modal probe utilizing ultrasound and photoplethysmograph sensors was developed and used to measure diameter values and local PWV from the carotid artery. Carotid BP was estimated using the measured physiological parameters without any subject- or population-specific calibration procedures. The proposed cuffless BP estimation method and system were tested for accuracy, usability, and for potential utility in hypertension screening, on a total of 83 subjects. Results: The prototype device demonstrated its capability of detecting beat-by-beat arterial dimensions and local PWV simultaneously. Carotid diastolic BP (DBP) and systolic BP (SBP) were estimated over multiple cardiac cycles in real-time. The absolute error in carotid DBP was Conclusion: The feasibility of calibration-free, cuffless BP measurement at an arterial site of interest was demonstrated with a level of acceptable accuracy. The study also demonstrated the potential utility of the proposed method and system in hypertension screening and local evaluation of arterial stiffness indices. Significance: Novel approach for calibration-free cuffless BP estimation; a potential tool for local BP measurement and hypertension screening.

60 citations


Cites methods from "Automatic Measurement of End-Diasto..."

  • ...instantaneous motion [30], capturing of end-diastolic diameter and distention waveforms [31], beat-by-beat evaluation of diameter parameters, and real-time elimination of non-ideal cardiac cycles were automatically performed by the developed measurement software....

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  • ...A set of mathematical models and algorithms developed to define the wall-lumen interface of ultrasound echoes and to perform real-time DD measurement has been detailed in our previous publication [31]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study results revealed the sensitivity of ARTSENS® Pen to detect changes in arterial stiffness with age, and the easy-to-use technology and the automated algorithms of the ARtsENS Pen make it suitable for cardiovascular risk assessment in resource-constrained settings.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE The conventional medical imaging modalities used for arterial stiffness measurement are non-scalable and unviable for field-level vascular screening. The need for an affordable, easy-to-operate automated non-invasive technologies remains unmet. To address this need, we present a portable image-free ultrasound device-ARTSENS® Pen, that uses a single-element ultrasound transducer for carotid stiffness evaluation. APPROACH The performance of the device was clinically validated on a cohort of 523 subjects. A clinical-grade B-mode ultrasound imaging system (ALOKA eTracking) was used as the reference. Carotid stiffness measurements were taken using the ARTSENS® Pen in sitting posture emulating field scenarios. MAIN RESULTS A statistically significant correlation (r > 0.80, p < 0.0001) with a non-significant bias was observed between the measurements obtained from the two devices. The ARTSENS® Pen device could perform highly repeatable measurements (with variation smaller than 10%) on a relatively larger percentage of the population when compared to the ALOKA system. The study results also revealed the sensitivity of ARTSENS® Pen to detect changes in arterial stiffness with age. SIGNIFICANCE The easy-to-use technology and the automated algorithms of the ARTSENS® Pen make it suitable for cardiovascular risk assessment in resource-constrained settings.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The AtheroCloud LD measurement system showed high intra/inter-operator reproducibility hence can be adapted for vascular screening mode or pharmaceutical clinical trial mode.
Abstract: Background Common carotid artery lumen diameter (LD) ultrasound measurement systems are either manual or semi-automated and lack reproducibility and variability studies. This pilot study presents an automated and cloud-based LD measurements software system (AtheroCloud) and evaluates its: (i) intra/inter-operator reproducibility and (ii) intra/inter-observer variability. Methods 100 patients (83 M, mean age: 68 ± 11 years), IRB approved, consisted of L/R CCA artery (200 ultrasound images), acquired using a 7.5-MHz linear transducer. The intra/inter-operator reproducibility was verified using three operator’s readings. Near-wall and far carotid wall borders were manually traced by two observers for intra/inter-observer variability analysis. Results The mean coefficient of correlation (CC) for intra- and inter-operator reproducibility between all the three automated reading pairs were: 0.99 (P Conclusions The AtheroCloud LD measurement system showed high intra/inter-operator reproducibility hence can be adapted for vascular screening mode or pharmaceutical clinical trial mode.

30 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The association of carotid stiffness with age, gender, hypertension/diabetes, smoking, and clustering of risk factors was studied and the trend persisted even after excluding hypertensives and subjects with diabetes.
Abstract: Objective: We investigate the field feasibility of carotid stiffness measurement using ARTSENS® Touch and report the first community-level data from India. Method: In an analytical cross-sectional survey among 1074 adults, we measured specific stiffness index ( $\beta $ ), pressure-strain elastic modulus ( $\text{E}_{\text {p}}$ ), arterial compliance (AC), and one-point pulse wave velocity (PWV $_{\beta }$ ) from the left common carotid artery. Data for established risk factors (waist circumference, blood pressure, plasma glucose, triglycerides, and HDL-C) were also collected. The association of carotid stiffness with age, gender, hypertension/diabetes, smoking, and clustering of risk factors was studied. Results: Measurements were repeatable with a relative difference (RD) between consecutive readings of $\sim 80$ % of arterial diameter values. The average RDs for $\beta $ , $\text{E}_{\text {p}}$ , AC, and PWV $_{\beta }$ , were 20.51%, 22.31%, 25.10%, and 14.13%, respectively. Typical range for stiffness indices among females and males were $\beta $ : 8.12 ± 3.59 vs 6.51 ± 2.78, $\text{E}_{\text {p}}$ : 113.24 ± 56.12 kPa vs 92.33 ± 40.65 kPa, PWV $_{\beta }$ : 6.32 ± 1.38 ms−1 vs 5.81 ± 1.16 ms−1, and AC: 0.54 ± 0.36 mm2 kPa−1 vs 0.72 ± 0.38 mm2 kPa−1. Mean $\beta $ , $\text{E}_{\text {p}}$ , and PWV $_{\beta }$ increased (and mean AC decreased) across decades of age; the trend persisted even after excluding hypertensives and subjects with diabetes. The odds ratio of presence of multiple risk factors for $\text{E}_{\text {p}} \ge93.71$ kPa and/or PWV $_{\beta } \ge6.56$ ms−1 was ≥ 2.12 or above in males. In females, it was just above 2.00 for $\text{E}_{\text {p}} \ge91.21$ kPa and/or PWV $_{\beta } \ge5.10$ ms−1 and increased to ≥ 3.33 for $\text{E}_{\text {p}} \ge143.50$ kPa and ≥ 3.25 for PWV $_{\beta } \ge7.31$ ms−1. Conclusion: The study demonstrated the feasibility of carotid stiffness measurement in a community setting. A positive association between the risk factors and carotid artery stiffness provides evidence for the device’s use in resource-constrained settings. Clinical Impact: The device paves the way for epidemiological and clinical studies that are essential for establishing population-level nomograms for wide-spread use of carotid stiffness in clinical practice and field screening of ‘at-risk’ subjects.

25 citations


Cites background from "Automatic Measurement of End-Diasto..."

  • ...set of automated algorithms identify and continuously track echoes originating from the walls and perform an online evaluation of the arterial lumen diameter and distension waveforms [14], [15], [17]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An extension of ARTSENS is reported to enable measurement of cfPWV that now makes it the only fully automatic device that can measure both LAS and RAS and is compared with other state-of-the-art AS measurement systems.
Abstract: Arterial stiffness (AS) has been shown to be an important marker for risk assessment of cardiovascular events. Local arterial stiffness (LAS) is conventionally measured by evaluating arterial distensibility at particular arterial sites through ultrasound imaging systems. Regional arterial stiffness (RAS) is generally obtained by evaluating carotid to femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV) through tonometric devices. RAS has a better prognostic value than LAS and cfPWV is considered as the gold standard of AS. Over the past few years our group has been developing ARTerial Stiffness Evaluation for Non-Invasive Screening (ARTSENS), an inexpensive and portable device to measure the LAS. It uses a single element ultrasound transducer to obtain A-Mode frames from the desired artery and is fully automated to enable a non-expert to perform measurements. In this work, we report an extension of ARTSENS to enable measurement of cfPWV that now makes it the only fully automatic device that can measure both LAS and RAS. In this paper, we provide a general review of the ARTSENS and compare it with other state-of-the-art AS measurement systems. cfPWV measurement using ARTSENS was cross-validated against SphygmoCor by successive measurements with both devices on 41 human subjects and excellent agreement between both devices was demonstrated (Coefficient of determination $({\bf R}^{2})=0.70\, ({\bf p} and, limits of agreement $({\rm LoA}) m/s). The inter-device correlation between ARTSENS and SphygmoCor was found to be better than other similar studies reported in the literature.

16 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An alternative approach, based on graphical techniques and simple calculations, is described, together with the relation between this analysis and the assessment of repeatability.

43,884 citations


"Automatic Measurement of End-Diasto..." refers background in this paper

  • ...96 × standard deviation of differences (SD) [38] are overlaid on the figure....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper summarizes the proceedings of several meetings of the European Network for Non-invasive Investigation of Large Arteries and is aimed at providing an updated and practical overview of the most relevant methodological aspects and clinical applications in this area.
Abstract: In recent years, great emphasis has been placed on the role of arterial stiffness in the development of cardiovascular diseases. Indeed, the assessment of arterial stiffness is increasingly used in the clinical assessment of patients. Although several papers have previously addressed the methodological issues concerning the various indices of arterial stiffness currently available, and their clinical applications, clinicians and researchers still report difficulties in selecting the most appropriate methodology for their specific use. This paper summarizes the proceedings of several meetings of the European Network for Non-invasive Investigation of Large Arteries and is aimed at providing an updated and practical overview of the most relevant methodological aspects and clinical applications in this area.

4,901 citations


"Automatic Measurement of End-Diasto..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...But, conventional methods require expensive B-Mode imaging systems and services of a trained radiologist [5]....

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Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the proceedings of several meetings of the European Network for Non-invasive Investigation of Large Arteries and aimed at providing an updated and practical overview of the most relevant methodological aspects and clinical applications in this area.
Abstract: In recent years, great emphasis has been placed on the role of arterial stiffness in the development of cardiovascular diseases. Indeed, the assessment of arterial stiffness is increasingly used in the clinical assessment of patients. Although several papers have previously addressed the methodological issues concerning the various indices of arterial stiffness currently available, and their clinical applications, clinicians and researchers still report difficulties in selecting the most appropriate methodology for their specific use. This paper summarizes the proceedings of several meetings of the European Network for Non-invasive Investigation of Large Arteries and is aimed at providing an updated and practical overview of the most relevant methodological aspects and clinical applications in this area.

4,410 citations

01 Jan 2011

2,545 citations


"Automatic Measurement of End-Diasto..." refers background in this paper

  • ...About 80 % of all CVD related deaths occur in developing countries [2]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effects of current and future cardiovascular drugs on arterial stiffness are discussed, as is the relationship between arterial elasticity and endothelial function.
Abstract: Investigation of arterial stiffness, especially of the large arteries, has gathered pace in recent years with the development of readily available noninvasive assessment techniques. These include the measurement of pulse wave velocity, the use of ultrasound to relate the change in diameter or area of an artery to distending pressure, and analysis of arterial waveforms obtained by applanation tonometry. Here, we describe each of these techniques and their limitations and discuss how the measured parameters relate to established cardiovascular risk factors and clinical outcome. We also consider which techniques might be most appropriate for wider clinical application. Finally, the effects of current and future cardiovascular drugs on arterial stiffness are also discussed, as is the relationship between arterial elasticity and endothelial function.

813 citations


"Automatic Measurement of End-Diasto..." refers background or methods in this paper

  • ...AS is generally characterized by Elastic modulus (Ep) [4,14] which is given by (1)....

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  • ...Risk of future CVD are routinely estimated by measurement of AS using non-invasive ultrasound investigation [3,4]....

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