Morphology extraction of fetal ECG using temporal CNN-based nonlinear adaptive noise cancelling

PLoS One. 2022 Dec 15;17(12):e0278917. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0278917. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Objectives: Noninvasive fetal electrocardiography (FECG) offers many advantages over alternative fetal monitoring techniques in evaluating fetal health conditions. However, it is difficult to extract a clean FECG signal with morphological features from an abdominal ECG recorded at the maternal abdomen; the signal is usually contaminated by the maternal ECG and various noises. The aim of the work is to extract an FECG signal that preserves the morphological features from the mother's abdominal ECG recording, which allows for accurately estimating the fetal heart rate (FHR) and analyzing the waveforms of the fetal ECG.

Methods: We propose a novel nonlinear adaptive noise cancelling framework (ANC) based on a temporal convolutional neural network (CNN) to effectively extract fetal ECG signals from mothers' abdominal ECG recordings. The proposed framework consists of a two-stage network, using the ANC architecture; one network is for the maternal ECG component elimination and the other is for the residual noise component removal of the extracted fetal ECG signal. Then, JADE (one of the blind source separation algorithms) is applied as a postprocessing step to produce a clean fetal ECG signal.

Results: Synthetic ECG data (FECGSYNDB) and clinical ECG data (NIFECGDB, PCDB) are used to evaluate the extraction performance of the proposed framework. The statistical and visual results demonstrate that our method outperforms the other state-of-the-art algorithms in the literature. Specifically, on the FECGSYNDB, the mean squared error (MSE), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), correlation coefficient (R) and F1-score of our method are 0.16, 7.94, 0.95 and 98.89%, respectively. The F1-score on the NIFECGDB reaches 98.62%. The value of the F1-score on the PCDB is 98.62%.

Conclusion: As opposed to the existing algorithms being restricted to fetal QRS complex detection, the proposed framework can preserve the morphological features of the extracted fetal ECG signal well, which could support medical diagnoses based on the morphology of the fetal ECG signal.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms
  • Electrocardiography / methods
  • Female
  • Fetal Monitoring* / methods
  • Heart Rate, Fetal / physiology
  • Humans
  • Neural Networks, Computer
  • Pregnancy
  • Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted*

Grants and funding

This work has been supported by the National Key R&D Program of China with Grant No.2019YFC0118805.