Title: PHONOCARDIOGRAPHY
1PHONOCARDIOGRAPHY
Saumya Mohan Kumar T.E. Biomed-Roll No.55
7/13/2016
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2Index
- Pioneers in auscultation
- Development of Stethoscope
- Development of Phonocardiograph
- Heart sounds
- Heart Murmurs
- Basic Block Diagram and Instrumentation
- Acquisition of phonocardiographic signals
- Writing methods for phonocardiography
- Pros and Cons
- Scope
- Echocardiography vs. Phonocardiography
- Case Study
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3Pioneers
- Hippocrates laid the foundation for auscultation
- Robert Hook realized diagnostic use of cardiac
auscultation - Biggest breakthrough in auscultation
- Rene Laennec invented stethoscope
- Dr. Jean Bennett Maguire devised a method of
real-time spectral phonocardiography for the
detection and classification of heart murmurs.
4Way to heart is through ears.
Development of Stethoscopes
Early monaural stethoscope
Modern binaural stethoscope
Modern electronic stethoscope
5Working
- Acoustic stethoscopes transmit sound mechanically
from a chest-piece via air filled hollow tubes to
the listener's ears. - The diaphragm and the bell work as two filters,
transmitting higher frequency sounds and lower
frequency sounds, - respectively.
- Electronic stethoscopes function in a similar
way, but the sound is converted to an electronic
signal which is transmitted to the listener by
wire. - Functionalities often included in electronic
stethoscopes are amplification of the signal,
filters imitating the function of the diaphragm
and the bell and in some cases recording
abilities to allow storage of data.
6Advantages
- Allow volume control of heart and lung sounds
heard more easily without amplifying other
sounds. - Even subtle changes in breath sounds can be
picked up and magnified - Aid health-care professionals in hearing heart
murmurs - Electronic stethoscopes also allow the user to
distinguish between body sounds of high and low
frequency. - They now have wireless capabilities, which allow
data to be transferred to a computer or handheld
device for storage and retrieval at a later time.
7Disadvantages
- Patients undergoing surgery have the sterile
field invaded thereby risking infection - Patients are frequently awakened and disturbed
- Serious developmental abnormalities in newborn
infants who are frequently disturbed - In the absence of airtight seal between
stethoscope and skin, which determines the
quality of sound wave transmission, background
noise is detected and physiologic sound
transmission is impaired. - They are not capable of generating constructive
interference of physiologic sound waves.
8Phonocardiograph- an intelligent Stethoscope
- Bioacoustic research
- Establish a relationship between mechanical
event- conduction of heart- within the body and
the sounds these events give rise to. - The medical use of this knowledge is to link
sounds that diverge from normality to certain
pathological conditions.
9- Phonocardiograph Instrument used for recording
sounds connected with the pumping action of heart -
10- Phonocardiogram
- A high fedility recording
- representing the rhythmicity and
- heart rate
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11- Phonocardiography the process of graphical
recording of heart sounds or murmurs
12Heart Sounds
- Mechanical working processes of the heart
produce sound which indicate health status of the
individual. - The relationship between blood volumes, pressures
and flows within the heart determines the
opening and closing of the heart valves. - Normal heart sounds- lub and dub- occur during
the closure of the valves. - The valvular theory states that heart sounds
emanate from a point sources located near the
valves. - In the cardiohemic theory the heart and the blood
represent an interdependent system that vibrates
as a whole and propagates sound as waves of
alternate pressure.
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16- The second sound (S2) signals the end of systole
and the beginning of diastole - It is heard at the time of the closing of the
aortic and pulmonary valves - S2 is probably the result of oscillations in the
cardiohemic system caused by deceleration and
reversal of flow into the aorta and the pulmonary
artery
17- A third heart sound (S3)
- connected with the diastolic filling period. The
rapid filling phase starts with the opening of
the semilunar valves. - attributes energy released with the sudden
deceleration of blood that enters the ventricle
throughout this period - A fourth heart sound (S4)
- connected with the late diastolic filling period
- occur during atrial systole where blood is forced
into the ventricles.
18Basic Heart Sounds in a Phonocardiogram Recording
19Heart murmurs
- Murmurs are extra heart sounds that are produced
as a result of turbulent blood flow which is
sufficient to produce audible noise. - Innocent murmurs are present in normal hearts
without any heart disease. - Pathologic Murmurs are as a result of various
problems, such as narrowing or leaking of valves,
or the presence of abnormal passages through
which blood flows in or near the heart. - Heart murmurs occur when the blood flow is
accelerated above the Reynolds number, which
induces non-stationary random vibrations, that
are transmitted through the cardiac and thoracic
tissues up to the surface of the thorax - They are graded by intensity from I to VI.
- Grade I is very faint and heard only with special
effort - Grade VI is extremely loud and accompanied by a
palpable thrill
20Factors involved in production of murmurs
21Heart Cycle
Name
Events
20
15
Pressure (kPa)
10
5
0
PCG
ECG
Time 0 (sec)
0.4
0.8
0.3
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.1
0.2
22Basic Block Diagram
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23Instrumentation
- Piezoelectric sensor to convert sound or
vibrations to electricity - Crystal or moving coil microphone having
frequency response between 5Hz and 1000Hz - Similar response characteristics
- Offer selective high pass filter to allow
frequency cutoff - Bandwidth 20- 2000Hz
- Amplify signal
- Permit selection of suitable frequency bands
- Avoid aliasing
- Separate louder low frequency signals from
lower intensity, much informative high frequency
murmurs.
- Basic transducer ?
- Amplifier ?
- Filter ?
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24- Recording envelope of higher frequency over 80Hz
along with actual signals below 80Hz. - Increase the power of incoming signal
- Efficiency is more
- Effect of noise is lowered
- Signal is converted to digital form and stored
permanently - For faithful recording of heart sounds
- Integrator ?
- Power Amplifier ?
- DAC and Readout or high frequency chart recorder
or ? oscilloscope or headphones
25Sensors
- Sensors used when recording sound
- ? Microphones
- ? Accelerometers
- These sensors have a high-frequency response that
is quite adequate for body sounds. - The microphone is an air coupled sensor that
measure pressure waves induced by chest-wall
movements - The accelerometers are contact sensors which
directly measures chest-wall movements - For recording of body sounds,
- ? condenser microphones
- ? piezoelectric accelerometers
- have been recommended.
26Acquisition of Phonocardiographic Signals
- Microphones picks up
- (i). Heart sounds
- (ii). Heart murmurs
- (iii). Extraneous noise in the immediate
vicinity of the patient - Group 1-
- (i) . Contact microphone
- (ii). Air coupled microphone
- Group 2-
- (i) Crystal microphone
- (ii) Dynamic microphone
27Group 1 Microphones
- Contact Microphone
- also known as a pickup or a piezo microphone
- made of a thin piezoelectric ceramic round disc
(ve) glued to a thin brass or alloy metal disc
(-ve) - designed to transmit audio vibrations through
solid objects. - contact mics act as transducers which pick up
vibrations and convert them into a voltage which
can then be made audible.
28Group 1 Microphones
- Air coupled Microphones
- shows a low-pass frequency response because of
its air-chamber compliance. - In the pass band, it is considered that the
microphone has a flat response, where the
mechanical impedance of air chamber is much
higher than that of chest wall, the vibration of
the measured chest-wall surface is stopped by
both the air chamber and the coupler surface in
contact with the chest wall. - The sound pressure, or normal stress exerted on
the chamber should be constant to keep a flat
response.
29Group 2 Microphones
- Crystal Microphones
- uses the piezoelectric effect of Rochelle salt,
quartz, or other crystalline materials. - This means that when mechanical stress, due to
heart sounds, is placed upon the material, a
voltage electromagnetic force is generated. - Since Rochelle salt has the largest voltage
output for a given mechanical stress, it is the
most commonly used crystal in microphones. - smaller in size, more sensitive than dynamic ones
30a diaphragm that is mechanically linked to the
crystal so that the sound waves are indirectly
coupled to the crystal.
a crystal is mounted so that the sound waves
strike it directly
31Group 2 Microphones
- Dynamic Microphones
- consists of a moving coil with fixed magnetic
core inside. - This moving coil moves with heart sounds, and
produces voltage because of its interaction with
magnetic flux -
32Technical design of Microphone
- It does not transform acoustic oscillations into
electrical potentials uniformly for all
frequencies. - Hence heart sound recording done with microphone
is valid for a particular type of frequency
only.. - Hence microphones of various types cannot be
interchanged.
33Writing methods for phonocardiography
- Requires a writing system capable of responding
to 2000 Hz. - Types of writing methods
- (i). Mechanical Recorders
- (ii). Optical Galvanometric Recorders
- (iii). Envelope detection
- (iv). Direct recording using Ink Jet
Recorders - (v). Electrostatic Recorder
- (vi). Thermal Recorder
34Ink Jet Recorders
- Merits
- very little loss of diagnostically important
information - eliminates the effort and delay of photographic
processing - immediacy of the results affords a means for
continuously monitoring the records for quality
and special content at the time of registration. - Demerits
- writing recorders with an upper frequency
response of 150 Hz cannot be used to write
frequencies that lie beyond their working range. - can only record heart sound intensity picked up
every 10 msec.
35Envelope Detection
- Uses artificial frequency of about 100 Hz in
heart sound amplifier - Employed to oscillate stylus so that high
frequency sounds are modulated by 100Hz
36- Pros
- Can provide real-time traces of heart beats,
movement and breathing. Taken together this can
provide a unique view of cardiac condition. - Passive, therefore inherently safe and can be
used for long periods. - Inherently cheap, (low data rates), and ideal for
screening of large populations and home
monitoring. - simple, low cost, houses the necessary
opto-electronic elements. and non-invasive
PC-based system that is capable to process real
time fetal phonocardiographic signal
- Cons
- Existing microphones are bulky and obtrusive
- Signal to noise ratio influenced motion artifacts
- Inherently 1 dimensional
- Extended instruments are intended for a pass
band from 0.2 to100 Hz with nonlinear
distortions to 10. - Recording of frequency components above this
limit is related with an appreciable drop in
amplitude of recording and an increase in
distortions. - The use of contacting transducers to sense the
vibrations is inappropriate.
37Scope
- Further Work
-
- 1. Design of clinical prototype
- 2. Improvements to signal conditioning and
control electronics - 3. Investigate wireless links for cordless
monitoring - 4. Remote measurement of small displacements at
compliant surfaces -
- Suggested Applications
- Remote sensing of sub 50 micron displacements
- Adult and fetal phonocardiography and phonography
- Remote measurements of compliant materials in
wind-tunnels - Infrasound intensity measurement
- Biomedical instrumentation
- Low-cost and low power confocal microscopy
- Cell culture measurement
38The two not alternative, and the less
contradictory, but mutually supplementing
methods.
- Echocardiography
- better diagnosis of mitral valve defects
,evaluating the degree of its stenosis and
characterizing the morphological changes of the
valve. - more informative about tricuspid valve defects
- echocardiographic data on the changes in the left
ventricular outflow tract help to explain the
origin of the spindle-form systolic murmur.
- Phonocardiography
- better diagnosing of mitral
- insufficiency, diagnosis of
- aortic valve defects
- more informative about state of aortic valves
- interpretation of systolic murmur was rather
complicated, although they are often seen on
phonocardiographic data of normal individuals and
patients with heart diseases.
39Case Study
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