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Multiscale Entropy Analysis: Application to Cardio-Respiratory Coupling

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2020
1325.pdf (2.174Mb)
Authors
Platisa, Mirjana M.
Radovanović, Nikola N.
Kalauzi, Aleksandar
Milasinović, Goran
Pavlović, Sinisa U.
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
It is known that in pathological conditions, physiological systems develop changes in the multiscale properties of physiological signals. However, in real life, little is known about how changes in the function of one of the two coupled physiological systems induce changes in function of the other one, especially on their multiscale behavior. Hence, in this work we aimed to examine the complexity of cardio-respiratory coupled systems control using multiscale entropy (MSE) analysis of cardiac intervals MSE (RR), respiratory time series MSE (Resp), and synchrony of these rhythms by cross multiscale entropy (CMSE) analysis, in the heart failure (HF) patients and healthy subjects. We analyzed 20 min of synchronously recorded RR intervals and respiratory signal during relaxation in the supine position in 42 heart failure patients and 14 control healthy subjects. Heart failure group was divided into three subgroups, according to the RR interval time series characteristics (atrial fibrillatio...n (HFAF), sinus rhythm (HFSin), and sinus rhythm with ventricular extrasystoles (HFVES)). Compared with healthy control subjects, alterations in respiratory signal properties were observed in patients from the HFSin and HFVES groups. Further, mean MSE curves of RR intervals and respiratory signal were not statistically different only in the HFSin group (p = 0.43). The level of synchrony between these time series was significantly higher in HFSin and HFVES patients than in control subjects and HFAF patients (p lt 0.01). In conclusion, depending on the specific pathologies, primary alterations in the regularity of cardiac rhythm resulted in changes in the regularity of the respiratory rhythm, as well as in the level of their asynchrony.

Keywords:
sinus rhythm / sinus rhythm with ventricular extrasystoles / sample entropy / respiratory rhythm / heart rhythm / heart failure / cross multiscale entropy analysis / cardiopulmonary coupling / autonomic nervous system / atrial fibrillation
Source:
Entropy, 2020, 22, 9
Publisher:
  • MDPI, Basel

DOI: 10.3390/e22091042

ISSN: 1099-4300

PubMed: 33286811

WoS: 000582066700001

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85092101893
[ Google Scholar ]
6
URI
http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1328
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanja
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Platisa, Mirjana M.
AU  - Radovanović, Nikola N.
AU  - Kalauzi, Aleksandar
AU  - Milasinović, Goran
AU  - Pavlović, Sinisa U.
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1328
AB  - It is known that in pathological conditions, physiological systems develop changes in the multiscale properties of physiological signals. However, in real life, little is known about how changes in the function of one of the two coupled physiological systems induce changes in function of the other one, especially on their multiscale behavior. Hence, in this work we aimed to examine the complexity of cardio-respiratory coupled systems control using multiscale entropy (MSE) analysis of cardiac intervals MSE (RR), respiratory time series MSE (Resp), and synchrony of these rhythms by cross multiscale entropy (CMSE) analysis, in the heart failure (HF) patients and healthy subjects. We analyzed 20 min of synchronously recorded RR intervals and respiratory signal during relaxation in the supine position in 42 heart failure patients and 14 control healthy subjects. Heart failure group was divided into three subgroups, according to the RR interval time series characteristics (atrial fibrillation (HFAF), sinus rhythm (HFSin), and sinus rhythm with ventricular extrasystoles (HFVES)). Compared with healthy control subjects, alterations in respiratory signal properties were observed in patients from the HFSin and HFVES groups. Further, mean MSE curves of RR intervals and respiratory signal were not statistically different only in the HFSin group (p = 0.43). The level of synchrony between these time series was significantly higher in HFSin and HFVES patients than in control subjects and HFAF patients (p  lt  0.01). In conclusion, depending on the specific pathologies, primary alterations in the regularity of cardiac rhythm resulted in changes in the regularity of the respiratory rhythm, as well as in the level of their asynchrony.
PB  - MDPI, Basel
T2  - Entropy
T1  - Multiscale Entropy Analysis: Application to Cardio-Respiratory Coupling
IS  - 9
VL  - 22
DO  - 10.3390/e22091042
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Platisa, Mirjana M. and Radovanović, Nikola N. and Kalauzi, Aleksandar and Milasinović, Goran and Pavlović, Sinisa U.",
year = "2020",
abstract = "It is known that in pathological conditions, physiological systems develop changes in the multiscale properties of physiological signals. However, in real life, little is known about how changes in the function of one of the two coupled physiological systems induce changes in function of the other one, especially on their multiscale behavior. Hence, in this work we aimed to examine the complexity of cardio-respiratory coupled systems control using multiscale entropy (MSE) analysis of cardiac intervals MSE (RR), respiratory time series MSE (Resp), and synchrony of these rhythms by cross multiscale entropy (CMSE) analysis, in the heart failure (HF) patients and healthy subjects. We analyzed 20 min of synchronously recorded RR intervals and respiratory signal during relaxation in the supine position in 42 heart failure patients and 14 control healthy subjects. Heart failure group was divided into three subgroups, according to the RR interval time series characteristics (atrial fibrillation (HFAF), sinus rhythm (HFSin), and sinus rhythm with ventricular extrasystoles (HFVES)). Compared with healthy control subjects, alterations in respiratory signal properties were observed in patients from the HFSin and HFVES groups. Further, mean MSE curves of RR intervals and respiratory signal were not statistically different only in the HFSin group (p = 0.43). The level of synchrony between these time series was significantly higher in HFSin and HFVES patients than in control subjects and HFAF patients (p  lt  0.01). In conclusion, depending on the specific pathologies, primary alterations in the regularity of cardiac rhythm resulted in changes in the regularity of the respiratory rhythm, as well as in the level of their asynchrony.",
publisher = "MDPI, Basel",
journal = "Entropy",
title = "Multiscale Entropy Analysis: Application to Cardio-Respiratory Coupling",
number = "9",
volume = "22",
doi = "10.3390/e22091042"
}
Platisa, M. M., Radovanović, N. N., Kalauzi, A., Milasinović, G.,& Pavlović, S. U.. (2020). Multiscale Entropy Analysis: Application to Cardio-Respiratory Coupling. in Entropy
MDPI, Basel., 22(9).
https://doi.org/10.3390/e22091042
Platisa MM, Radovanović NN, Kalauzi A, Milasinović G, Pavlović SU. Multiscale Entropy Analysis: Application to Cardio-Respiratory Coupling. in Entropy. 2020;22(9).
doi:10.3390/e22091042 .
Platisa, Mirjana M., Radovanović, Nikola N., Kalauzi, Aleksandar, Milasinović, Goran, Pavlović, Sinisa U., "Multiscale Entropy Analysis: Application to Cardio-Respiratory Coupling" in Entropy, 22, no. 9 (2020),
https://doi.org/10.3390/e22091042 . .

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