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- Yongqin Li, Joe Bisera, Wanchun Tang, and Max Harry Weil.
- Weil Institute of Critical Care Medicine, Rancho Mirage, California 92270, USA.
- Crit Pathw Cardiol. 2007 Sep 1;6(3):131-4.
AbstractSudden death due to ventricular fibrillation (VF) is a catastrophic event, especially in out-of-hospital settings. Prompt detection of VF and preparedness to intervene with cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and especially the delivery of an electrical shock is potentially lifesaving. The reliability and accuracy of automated VF detection by current versions of automated external defibrillators (AEDs) require interruption of CPR because the ECG signal, which is the source of rhythm detection, is corrupted by chest compressions. Significantly better outcomes have been reported if effective chest compression precedes electrical defibrillation and especially if interruptions are minimized. We therefore sought a method by which VF detection could proceed without interrupting chest compressions. A VF detection algorithm was therefore derived based on a method by which continuous wavelet transform is used, together with measurement of morphologic consistency. This method was intended to distinguish between disorganized and organized rhythms. The Fourier-transform-based amplitude spectrum analysis was then used to detect the likelihood that VF was the rhythm prompting the delivery of an electrical shock. The algorithm was validated on 33,095 electrocardiographic segments, including 8840 segments corrupted by compression artifacts from 232 patients after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Nine thousand one hundred eighty-seven of 10,042 VF segments and 20,884 of 23,053 non-VF segments were correctly classified, with a sensitivity of 91.5% and a specificity of 90.6%. Although the proposed algorithm has a lesser predictive value for VF detection than the uncorrupted ECGs in clinical settings, it has the major potential for automated rhythm identification to guide defibrillation without repetitive interruptions of CPR.
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