Monitoring Cardiovascular Problems in Heart Patients Using Machine Learning

The World Health Organization reports that heart disease is the most common cause of death globally, accounting for 17.9 million fatalities annually. The fundamentals of a cure, it is thought, are important symptoms and recognition of the illness. Traditional techniques are facing many challenges, r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of healthcare engineering Vol. 2023; no. 1; p. 9738123
Main Authors Al Ahdal, Ahmed, Rakhra, Manik, Rajendran, Rahul R., Arslan, Farrukh, Khder, Moaiad Ahmad, Patel, Binit, Rajagopal, Balaji Ramkumar, Jain, Rituraj
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Hindawi 2023
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Summary:The World Health Organization reports that heart disease is the most common cause of death globally, accounting for 17.9 million fatalities annually. The fundamentals of a cure, it is thought, are important symptoms and recognition of the illness. Traditional techniques are facing many challenges, ranging from delayed or unnecessary treatment to incorrect diagnoses, which can affect treatment progress, increase the bill, and give the disease more time to spread and harm the patient’s body. Such errors could be avoided and minimized by employing ML and AI techniques. Many significant efforts have been made in recent years to increase computer-aided diagnosis and detection applications, which is a rapidly growing area of research. Machine learning algorithms are especially important in CAD, which is used to detect patterns in medical data sources and make nontrivial predictions to assist doctors and clinicians in making timely decisions. This study aims to develop multiple methods for machine learning using the UCI set of data based on individuals’ medical attributes to aid in the early detection of cardiovascular disease. Various machine learning techniques are used to evaluate and review the results of the UCI machine learning heart disease dataset. The proposed algorithms had the highest accuracy, with the random forest classifier achieving 96.72% and the extreme gradient boost achieving 95.08%. This will assist the doctor in taking appropriate actions. The proposed technology will only be able to determine whether or not a person has a heart issue. The severity of heart disease cannot be determined using this method.
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Academic Editor: Ali Kashif Bashir
ISSN:2040-2295
2040-2309
DOI:10.1155/2023/9738123