Affiliation:
1. School of Engineering University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia
2. Menzies Institute for Medical Research University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia
3. Department of Paediatrics Royal Hobart Hospital Hobart Tasmania Australia
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveTo examine the effectiveness of a noncontact vision‐based infrared respiratory monitor (IRM) in the detection of authentic respiratory motion in newborn infants.Study DesignObservational study in a neonatal intensive care unit.MethodsEligible infants lay supine with torso exposed under the IRM's infrared depth‐map camera and torso images were recorded at 30 frames/s. Respiratory motion waveforms were subsequently derived from upper (IRMupper) and lower (IRMlower) torso region images and compared with contemporaneous impedance pneumography (IP) and capsule pneumography (CP). Waveforms, in 15 s investigative epochs, were scanned with an 8 s sliding window for authentic respiratory waveform (spectral purity index [SPI] ≥ 0.75, minimum five complete breaths). Maximum SPI and frequency of occurrence of authentic respiratory waveform in 15 s epochs were compared between monitoring modalities in pooled and per patient data (Friedman ANOVA).ResultsRecordings comprised 532 min of images from 35 infants, yielding 2131 investigative epochs, with authentic respiratory motion detected in all infants. For CP, IP, IRMupper, and IRMlower, the proportion of epochs containing authentic respiratory motion in pooled data were 65%, 50%, 36%, and 48%, with median SPImax of 0.79, 0.75, 0.70, and 0.74, respectively. Per‐patient average SPImax was 0.79, 0.75, 0.69, and 0.74 for CP, IP, IRMupper, and IRMlower with proportion of authentic respiratory motion being 64%, 50%, 29%, and 49%, respectively.ConclusionAn IRM focused on the lower torso detected authentic respiratory motion with comparable performance to IP in newborn infants in intensive care and deserves further investigation.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
4 articles.
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