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Respiratory rate, an important antecedent of patient deterioration, is inadequately recorded by hospital staff, partially due to the absence of a reliable automated technique for measuring it. The ECG has been proposed by several authors in recent years as a source of reliable respiratory information. Most algorithms proposed use either respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) or the R-peak amplitude (RPA) modulation of the ECG. In this paper, we propose a novel method for estimating respiratory rate from the ECG which fuses frequency information from the two methods. The method was evaluated on data from 40 young and elderly subjects and validated against a “gold standard” respiratory rate obtained from simultaneously recorded respiration data. The fusion method outperformed the RSA and RPA methods, giving a mean absolute error of 0.81 bpm for the young subject population and 0.84 bpm for the elderly, using 1-min windows of data. Unlike other algorithms, the technique does not underperform at the lower or higher respiratory rates.

Type

Journal article

Journal

Biomedical Signal Processing & Control

Publisher

Biomedical Signal Processsing & Control

Publication Date

31/01/2013

Total pages

8(1):98-105

Addresses

susannah.fleming@phc.ox.ac.uk

Keywords

Respiratory rate; Respiratory sinus arrhythmia; R-peak amplitude; Single-lead ECG