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Hauptverfasser: Koscova, Zuzana, Shah, Amit, Rad, Ali Bahrami, Li, Qiao, Clifford, Gari D, Sameni, Reza
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.18101
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author Koscova, Zuzana
Shah, Amit
Rad, Ali Bahrami
Li, Qiao
Clifford, Gari D
Sameni, Reza
author_facet Koscova, Zuzana
Shah, Amit
Rad, Ali Bahrami
Li, Qiao
Clifford, Gari D
Sameni, Reza
contents T-wave alternans (TWA) is a potential marker for sudden cardiac death, but its reliable analysis is often constrained to noise-free environments, limiting its utility in real-world settings. We explore model-based T-wave estimation to mitigate the impact of noise on TWA level. Detection was performed using a previous surrogate-based method as a benchmark and a new method based on a Markov model state transition matrix (STM). These were combined with a Modified Moving Average (MMA) method and polynomial T-wave modeling to enhance noise robustness. Methods were tested across a wide range of signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), from -5 to 30 dB, and different noise types: baseline wander (BW), muscle artifacts (MA), electrode movement (EM), and respiratory modulation. Synthetic ECGs with known TWA levels were used: 0 uV for TWA-free and 30-72 uV for TWA-present signals. T-wave modeling improved estimation accuracy under noisy conditions. With EM noise at SNRs of -5 and 5 dB, mean absolute error (MAE) dropped from 62 to 49 uV and 27 to 25 uV, respectively (Mann-Whitney-U test, p < 0.05) with modeling applied. Similar improvements were seen with MA noise: MAE dropped from 100 to 70 uV and 26 to 23 uV. In detection, the STM method achieved an F1-score of 0.92, outperforming the surrogate-based method (F1 = 0.81), though both struggled under EM noise at -5 dB. Importantly, beyond SNR, detection performance depended on the number of beats analyzed. These findings show that combining model-based estimation with STM detection significantly improves TWA analysis under noise, supporting its application in ambulatory and wearable ECG monitoring.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_18101
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Noise-Robust Model-Based Approach to T-Wave Amplitude Measurement and Alternans Detection
Koscova, Zuzana
Shah, Amit
Rad, Ali Bahrami
Li, Qiao
Clifford, Gari D
Sameni, Reza
Medical Physics
Mathematical Physics
T-wave alternans (TWA) is a potential marker for sudden cardiac death, but its reliable analysis is often constrained to noise-free environments, limiting its utility in real-world settings. We explore model-based T-wave estimation to mitigate the impact of noise on TWA level. Detection was performed using a previous surrogate-based method as a benchmark and a new method based on a Markov model state transition matrix (STM). These were combined with a Modified Moving Average (MMA) method and polynomial T-wave modeling to enhance noise robustness. Methods were tested across a wide range of signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), from -5 to 30 dB, and different noise types: baseline wander (BW), muscle artifacts (MA), electrode movement (EM), and respiratory modulation. Synthetic ECGs with known TWA levels were used: 0 uV for TWA-free and 30-72 uV for TWA-present signals. T-wave modeling improved estimation accuracy under noisy conditions. With EM noise at SNRs of -5 and 5 dB, mean absolute error (MAE) dropped from 62 to 49 uV and 27 to 25 uV, respectively (Mann-Whitney-U test, p < 0.05) with modeling applied. Similar improvements were seen with MA noise: MAE dropped from 100 to 70 uV and 26 to 23 uV. In detection, the STM method achieved an F1-score of 0.92, outperforming the surrogate-based method (F1 = 0.81), though both struggled under EM noise at -5 dB. Importantly, beyond SNR, detection performance depended on the number of beats analyzed. These findings show that combining model-based estimation with STM detection significantly improves TWA analysis under noise, supporting its application in ambulatory and wearable ECG monitoring.
title A Noise-Robust Model-Based Approach to T-Wave Amplitude Measurement and Alternans Detection
topic Medical Physics
Mathematical Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.18101