Acoustic thoracic image of crackle sounds using linear and nonlinear processing techniques
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In this study, a novel approach is proposed, the imaging of crackle sounds distribution on the thorax based on processing techniques that could contend with the detection and count of crackles; hence, the normalized fractal dimension (NFD), the univariate AR modeling combined with a supervised neural network (UAR-SNN), and the time-variant autoregressive (TVAR) model were assessed. The proposed processing schemes were tested inserting simulated crackles in normal lung sounds acquired by a multichannel syst m on the posterior thoracic surface. In order to evaluate the robustness of the processing schemes, different scenarios were created by manipulating the number of crackles, the type of crackles, the spatial distribution, and the signal to noise ratio (SNR) at different pulmonary regions. The results indicate that TVAR scheme showed the best performance, compared with NFD and UAR-SNN schemes, for detecting and counting simulated crackles with an average specificity very close to 100%25, and average sensitivity of 98 ± 7.5%25 even with overlapped crackles and with SNR corresponding to a scaling factor as low as 1.5. Finally, the performance of the TVAR scheme was tested against a human expert using simulated and real acoustic information. We conclude that a confident image of crackle sounds distribution by crackles counting using TVAR on the thoracic surface is thoroughly possible. The crackles imaging might represent an aid to the clinical evaluation of pulmonary diseases that produce this sort of adventitious discontinuous lung sounds. © 2010 International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering.
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Discontinuous adventitious sound imaging; Fine and coarse crackles; Fractal dimension; Lung sound; Time-variant autoregressive model Acoustic information; Auto-regressive; Average sensitivities; Clinical evaluation; Discontinuous adventitious sounds; Fine and coarse crackles; Human expert; Lung sound; Lung sounds; Multi-channel; Nonlinear processing; Processing technique; Scaling factors; Supervised neural networks; Time variant; Time-variant autoregressive model; Univariate; Biological organs; Computer simulation; Neural networks; Partial discharges; Signal to noise ratio; Fractal dimension; abnormal respiratory sound; adult; article; artificial neural network; auscultation; evaluation; fractal analysis; human; methodology; signal processing; Adult; Auscultation; Fractals; Humans; Neural Networks (Computer); Respiratory Sounds; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Young Adult
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