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Assessment of Interaction Between Cardio-Respiratory Signals Using Directed Coherence on Healthy Subjects During Postural Change

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Abstract Purpose To detect and quantify the directional interaction changes between cardio-respiratory system during postural change. Method Traditional frequency domain analysis based on power spectrum and coherence are insufficient to… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Purpose To detect and quantify the directional interaction changes between cardio-respiratory system during postural change. Method Traditional frequency domain analysis based on power spectrum and coherence are insufficient to quantify nonlinear structures and complexity of physiological subsystems. Recently, Granger causality is found as preferable method for evaluation of causality i.e., directional interaction. Frequency domain Granger causality based on directed coherence has been used in this study to identify directional interaction between cardiac and respiratory signal during postural change from supine to standing for healthy subjects. Result ECG and respiration signal are recorded for this study. The beat-to-beat variability series from ECG provides heart rate (RR) and the respiration amplitude corresponds to RESP time series. It was observed that respiration is responsible for the changes in ECG signal during supine position as compared to standing. The outflow of information from RESP to RR increases during supine results in stronger interaction but reduces during standing result in reduction of interaction. Similarly, the effect of RR on RESP is found significant only during standing. Conclusion The proposed directed coherence approach detects the cardio-respiratory regulation during postural change and provide information about coupling changes during this transition.

Keywords: postural change; coherence; cardio respiratory; interaction

Journal Title: IRBM
Year Published: 2019

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