Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECG

Electrode reversal errors in standard 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECG) can produce significant ECG changes and, in turn, misleading diagnoses. Their detection is important but mostly limited to the design of criteria using ECG databases with simulated reversals, without Wilson’s central te...

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Main Authors: Vessela Krasteva, Irena Jekova, Ramun Schmid
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/19/13/2920
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spelling doaj-ac427a704fb14ef78cb6ff62c56c25b82020-11-25T01:27:31ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202019-07-011913292010.3390/s19132920s19132920Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECGVessela Krasteva0Irena Jekova1Ramun Schmid2Institute of Biophysics and Biomedical Engineering, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Acad. G. Bonchev Str. Bl 105, 1113 Sofia, BulgariaInstitute of Biophysics and Biomedical Engineering, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Acad. G. Bonchev Str. Bl 105, 1113 Sofia, BulgariaSignal Processing, Schiller AG, Altgasse 68, CH-6341 Baar, SwitzerlandElectrode reversal errors in standard 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECG) can produce significant ECG changes and, in turn, misleading diagnoses. Their detection is important but mostly limited to the design of criteria using ECG databases with simulated reversals, without Wilson’s central terminal (WCT) potential change. This is, to the best of our knowledge, the first study that presents an algebraic transformation for simulation of all possible ECG cable reversals, including those with displaced WCT, where most of the leads appear with distorted morphology. The simulation model of ECG electrode swaps and the resultant WCT potential change is derived in the standard 12-lead ECG setup. The transformation formulas are theoretically compared to known limb lead reversals and experimentally proven for unknown limb−chest electrode swaps using a 12-lead ECG database from 25 healthy volunteers (recordings without electrode swaps and with 5 unicolor pairs swaps, including red (right arm—C1), yellow (left arm—C2), green (left leg (LL) —C3), black (right leg (RL)—C5), all unicolor pairs). Two applications of the transformation are shown to be feasible: ‘Forward’ (simulation of reordered leads from correct leads) and ‘Inverse’ (reconstruction of correct leads from an ECG recorded with known electrode reversals). Deficiencies are found only when the ground RL electrode is swapped as this case requires guessing the unknown RL electrode potential. We suggest assuming that potential to be equal to that of the LL electrode. The ‘Forward’ transformation is important for comprehensive training platforms of humans and machines to reliably recognize simulated electrode swaps using the available resources of correctly recorded ECG databases. The ‘Inverse’ transformation can save time and costs for repeated ECG recordings by reconstructing the correct lead set if a lead swap is detected after the end of the recording. In cases when the electrode reversal is unknown but a prior correct ECG recording of the same patient is available, the ‘Inverse’ transformation is tested to detect the exact swapping of the electrodes with an accuracy of (96% to 100%).https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/19/13/2920ECG electrode swapsECG electrode potentialsWCT potential changereconstructing correct ECG leadsMSMinv transformationunicolor limb–chest electrodes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vessela Krasteva
Irena Jekova
Ramun Schmid
spellingShingle Vessela Krasteva
Irena Jekova
Ramun Schmid
Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECG
Sensors
ECG electrode swaps
ECG electrode potentials
WCT potential change
reconstructing correct ECG leads
MSMinv transformation
unicolor limb–chest electrodes
author_facet Vessela Krasteva
Irena Jekova
Ramun Schmid
author_sort Vessela Krasteva
title Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECG
title_short Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECG
title_full Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECG
title_fullStr Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECG
title_full_unstemmed Simulating Arbitrary Electrode Reversals in Standard 12-Lead ECG
title_sort simulating arbitrary electrode reversals in standard 12-lead ecg
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Electrode reversal errors in standard 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECG) can produce significant ECG changes and, in turn, misleading diagnoses. Their detection is important but mostly limited to the design of criteria using ECG databases with simulated reversals, without Wilson’s central terminal (WCT) potential change. This is, to the best of our knowledge, the first study that presents an algebraic transformation for simulation of all possible ECG cable reversals, including those with displaced WCT, where most of the leads appear with distorted morphology. The simulation model of ECG electrode swaps and the resultant WCT potential change is derived in the standard 12-lead ECG setup. The transformation formulas are theoretically compared to known limb lead reversals and experimentally proven for unknown limb−chest electrode swaps using a 12-lead ECG database from 25 healthy volunteers (recordings without electrode swaps and with 5 unicolor pairs swaps, including red (right arm—C1), yellow (left arm—C2), green (left leg (LL) —C3), black (right leg (RL)—C5), all unicolor pairs). Two applications of the transformation are shown to be feasible: ‘Forward’ (simulation of reordered leads from correct leads) and ‘Inverse’ (reconstruction of correct leads from an ECG recorded with known electrode reversals). Deficiencies are found only when the ground RL electrode is swapped as this case requires guessing the unknown RL electrode potential. We suggest assuming that potential to be equal to that of the LL electrode. The ‘Forward’ transformation is important for comprehensive training platforms of humans and machines to reliably recognize simulated electrode swaps using the available resources of correctly recorded ECG databases. The ‘Inverse’ transformation can save time and costs for repeated ECG recordings by reconstructing the correct lead set if a lead swap is detected after the end of the recording. In cases when the electrode reversal is unknown but a prior correct ECG recording of the same patient is available, the ‘Inverse’ transformation is tested to detect the exact swapping of the electrodes with an accuracy of (96% to 100%).
topic ECG electrode swaps
ECG electrode potentials
WCT potential change
reconstructing correct ECG leads
MSMinv transformation
unicolor limb–chest electrodes
url https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/19/13/2920
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