Personalization of pulse arrival time based blood pressure surrogates through single spot check measurements
- Resource Type
- Conference
- Authors
- Bresch, E.; Derkx, R.; Paulussen, I.; Noordergraaf, G. J.; Schmitt, L.; Muehlsteff, J.
- Source
- 2021 43rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine & Biology Society (EMBC) Engineering in Medicine & Biology Society (EMBC), 2021 43rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE. :5437-5440 Nov, 2021
- Subject
- Bioengineering
Pulse measurements
Biological system modeling
Measurement uncertainty
Surgery
Blood pressure
Time measurement
Pressure measurement
- Language
- ISSN
- 2694-0604
Objective: We investigate the effect of selective single parameter personalization on the performance of multi-parameter models for pulse arrival time (PAT) based blood pressure (BP) surrogates. Methods: Our data set stems from 15 surgery patients, and we selected from each patient 5 segments of 30 min length each. We evaluate the root mean squared BP tracking error of the two models with and without single parameter personalization. We further compare the BP tracking performance to a surrogate-free sample-and-hold approach, e.g., as afforded by conventional non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP) oscillometry. Results: Parameter personalization is key to realizing a tracking performance benefit of PAT-based BP surrogates. The highest tracking error reduction of about 3.7 mmHg with respect to a sample-and-hold approach was reached with a personalized model which is linear in the pulse wave velocity domain. It achieves an estimation error of 7.8 mmHg with respect to a continuously measured invasive reference.Clinical Relevance—We give a performance analysis of PAT-based BP surrogates which are personalized to a patient with a single NIBP spot measurement. We show for surgery patients that patient-specific personalization enables continuous beat-to-beat BP monitoring over 30 min intervals with a average root mean squared error of less than 8 mmHg