Robust Classification of Intramuscular EMG Signals to Aid the Diagnosis of Neuromuscular Disorders

IEEE Open J Eng Med Biol. 2020 Aug 17:1:235-242. doi: 10.1109/OJEMB.2020.3017130. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Goal: This article presents the design and validation of an accurate automatic diagnostic system to classify intramuscular EMG (iEMG) signals into healthy, myopathy, or neuropathy categories to aid the diagnosis of neuromuscular diseases. Methods: First, an iEMG signal is decimated to produce a set of "disjoint" downsampled signals, which are decomposed by the lifting wavelet transform (LWT). The Higuchi's fractal dimensions (FDs) of LWT coefficients in the subbands are computed. The FDs of LWT subband coefficients are fused with one-dimensional local binary pattern derived from each downsampled signal. Next, a multilayer perceptron neural network (MLPNN) determines the class labels of downsampled signals. Finally, the sequence of class labels is fed to the Boyer-Moore majority vote (BMMV) algorithm, which assigns a class to every iEMG signal. Results: The MLPNN-BMMV classifier was experimented with 250 iEMG signals belonging to three categories. The performance of the classifier was validated in comparison with state-of-the-art approaches. The MLPNN-BMMV has resulted in impressive performance measures (%) using a 10-fold cross-validation-accuracy = [Formula: see text], sensitivity (normal) = [Formula: see text], sensitivity (myopathy) = [Formula: see text], sensitivity (neuropathy) = [Formula: see text], specificity (normal) = [Formula: see text], specificity (myopathy) = [Formula: see text], and specificity (neuropathy) = [Formula: see text]-surpassing the existing approaches. Conclusions: A future research direction is to validate the classifier performance with diverse iEMG datasets, which would lead to the design of an affordable real-time expert system for neuromuscular disorder diagnosis.

Keywords: Fractal dimension; intramuscular electromyography; lifting wavelet transform; local binary pattern; majority vote; multilayer perceptron neural network; neuromuscular disorders.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under Grant 826589.