In recent years, extensive studies have been conducted in the area of pumping state detection for implantable rotary blood pumps. However, limited studies have focused on automatically identifying the aortic valve non-opening (ANO) state despite its importance in the development of control algorithms aiming for myocardial recovery. In the present study, we investigated the performance of 14 ANO indices derived from the pump speed waveform using four different types of classifiers, including linear discriminant analysis, logistic regression, back propagation neural network, and k-nearest neighbors (KNN). Experimental measurements from four greyhounds, which take into consideration the variations in cardiac contractility, systemic vascular resistance, and total blood volume were used. By having only two indices, (i) the root mean square value, and (ii) the standard deviation, we were able to achieve an accuracy of 92.8% with the KNN classifier. Further increase of the number of indices to five for the KNN classifier increases the overall accuracy to 94.6%.
A medical case study related to implantable rotary blood pumps is examined. Five classifiers and two ensemble classifiers are applied to process the signals collected from the pumps for the identification of the aortic valve nonopening pump state. In addition to the noise-free datasets, up to 40% class noise has been added to the signals to evaluate the classification performance when mislabeling is present in the classifier training set. In order to ensure a reliable diagnostic model for the identification of the pump states, classifications performed with and without class noise are evaluated. The multilayer perceptron emerged as the best performing classifier for pump state detection due to its high accuracy as well as robustness against class noise.
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