Mobile smart helmet for brain stroke early detection through neural network-based signals analysis

The treatments for brain stroke are strongly timedependent. The medical literature highlights the need of a quick diagnosis in order to guarantee the most effective therapy. An important target for strokes is trying to achieve a Door-to-Needle (DTN) time of less than 60 minutes, which is called Golden Hour [1]. This paper proposes a mobile Smart Helmet (SH) thought to be worn by a patient when the first aid medical team arrives and the aim is to efficiently recognize and detect a brain stroke, on site. While similar solutions in the literature employ the (usually computationally heavy) electromagnetic field inversion problem and image analysis, the proposal of this paper is an NN-based SH. It uses signal analysis to recognize the presence of a stroke with a limited computational burden. In the reported preliminary experiments, carried out via simulations, we have employed a MultiLayer Perceptron (MLP) model that implements a 4-layer NN. Numerical results show that proposed signal analysis, applied to a single brain model, is able to efficiently detect the stroke presence with an accuracy around 90%. © 2017 IEEE.

Authors
Bisio I. 1, 2 , Fedeli A.1 , Lavagetto F.1 , Pastorino M.1 , Randazzo A.1 , Sciarrone A.1 , Tavanti E.1
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Language
English
Pages
1-6
Status
Published
Volume
2018-January
Year
2018
Organizations
  • 1 Department of Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications Engineering, and Naval Architecture, University of Genoa, Italy
  • 2 Peoples' Friendship University of Russia, RUDN University, Russian Federation
Keywords
Brain models; Electromagnetic fields; Signal analysis; Computational burden; Effective therapy; Field inversion; Medical literatures; Multi layer perceptron; Numerical results; Signals analysis; Similar solution; Diagnosis
Date of creation
19.10.2018
Date of change
19.10.2018
Short link
https://repository.rudn.ru/en/records/article/record/6920/
Share

Other records