Entropy (May 2015)

Oxygen Saturation and RR Intervals Feature Selection for Sleep Apnea Detection

  • Antonio G. Ravelo-García,
  • Jan F. Kraemer,
  • Juan L. Navarro-Mesa,
  • Eduardo Hernández-Pérez,
  • Javier Navarro-Esteva,
  • Gabriel Juliá-Serdá,
  • Thomas Penzel,
  • Niels Wessel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/e17052932
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
pp. 2932 – 2957

Abstract

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A diagnostic system for sleep apnea based on oxygen saturation and RR intervals obtained from the EKG (electrocardiogram) is proposed with the goal to detect and quantify minute long segments of sleep with breathing pauses. We measured the discriminative capacity of combinations of features obtained from RR series and oximetry to evaluate improvements of the performance compared to oximetry-based features alone. Time and frequency domain variables derived from oxygen saturation (SpO2) as well as linear and non-linear variables describing the RR series have been explored in recordings from 70 patients with suspected sleep apnea. We applied forward feature selection in order to select a minimal set of variables that are able to locate patterns indicating respiratory pauses. Linear discriminant analysis (LDA) was used to classify the presence of apnea during specific segments. The system will finally provide a global score indicating the presence of clinically significant apnea integrating the segment based apnea detection. LDA results in an accuracy of 87%; sensitivity of 76% and specificity of 91% (AUC = 0.90) with a global classification of 97% when only oxygen saturation is used. In case of additionally including features from the RR series; the system performance improves to an accuracy of 87%; sensitivity of 73% and specificity of 92% (AUC = 0.92), with a global classification rate of 100%.

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