Automatic recognition of murmurs of ventricular septal defect using convolutional recurrent neural networks with temporal attentive pooling

Recognizing specific heart sound patterns is important for the diagnosis of structural heart diseases. However, the correct recognition of heart murmur depends largely on clinical experience. Accurately identifying abnormal heart sound patterns is challenging for young and inexperienced clinicians....

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Published inScientific reports Vol. 10; no. 1; pp. 21797 - 10
Main Authors Wang, Jou-Kou, Chang, Yun-Fan, Tsai, Kun-Hsi, Wang, Wei-Chien, Tsai, Chang-Yen, Cheng, Chui-Hsuan, Tsao, Yu
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Nature Publishing Group 11.12.2020
Nature Publishing Group UK
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:Recognizing specific heart sound patterns is important for the diagnosis of structural heart diseases. However, the correct recognition of heart murmur depends largely on clinical experience. Accurately identifying abnormal heart sound patterns is challenging for young and inexperienced clinicians. This study is aimed at the development of a novel algorithm that can automatically recognize systolic murmurs in patients with ventricular septal defects (VSDs). Heart sounds from 51 subjects with VSDs and 25 subjects without a significant heart malformation were obtained in this study. Subsequently, the soundtracks were divided into different training and testing sets to establish the recognition system and evaluate the performance. The automatic murmur recognition system was based on a novel temporal attentive pooling-convolutional recurrent neural network (TAP-CRNN) model. On analyzing the performance using the test data that comprised 178 VSD heart sounds and 60 normal heart sounds, a sensitivity rate of 96.0% was obtained along with a specificity of 96.7%. When analyzing the heart sounds recorded in the second aortic and tricuspid areas, both the sensitivity and specificity were 100%. We demonstrated that the proposed TAP-CRNN system can accurately recognize the systolic murmurs of VSD patients, showing promising potential for the development of software for classifying the heart murmurs of several other structural heart diseases.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-020-77994-z