Neha Arora

and 1 more

ECG is a non-invasive way of determining cardiac health by measuring the electrical activity of the heart. We investigate a novel detection technique for feature points P, QRS and T to diagnose various atrial and ventricular cardiovascular anomalies with ECG signals for ambulatory monitoring. Before the system is worthy of field trials, we validated it with several databases and recorded their response. The QRS complex detection is based on the Pan Tompkins Algorithm and difference operation method that provides positive predictivity, sensitivity and false detection rate of 99.29\%, 99.49\% and 1.29 \% respectively. Proposed novel T wave detection provides sensitivity of 97.78\%. Also, proposed P wave detection provides positive predictivity, sensitivity and false detection rate of 99.43\%, 99.4\% and 1.15\% for the control study (normal subjects) and 82.68\%, 94.3\% and 25.4\% for the case (patients with cardiac anomalies) study respectively. Disease detection such as, arrhythmia is based on standard R-R intervals while myocardial infarction is based on the ST-T deviations where the positive predictivity, sensitivity and accuracy are observed to be 94.6\%, 84.2\% and 85\%, respectively. It should be noted that, since the frontal leads are only used, the anterior myocardial infarction cases are detected with the injury pattern in lead \textit{avl} and ST depression in reciprocal leads. Detection of atrial fibrillation is done for both short and long duration signals using statistical methods using interquartile range and standard deviations, giving very high accuracy, 100\% in most cases. The system hardware for obtaining the 2 lead ECG signal is designed using commercially available off the shelf components. Small field validation of the designed system is performed at a Public Health Centre in Gujarat, India with 42 patients (both cases and controls). We achieved 78.5\% accuracy during the field validation.