1. Validation of Photoplethysmography-Based Sleep Staging Compared With Polysomnography in Healthy Middle-Aged Adults.
- Author
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Fonseca P, Weysen T, Goelema MS, Møst EIS, Radha M, Lunsingh Scheurleer C, van den Heuvel L, and Aarts RM
- Subjects
- Actigraphy, Adult, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Movement physiology, Wakefulness physiology, Wrist, Photoplethysmography methods, Photoplethysmography standards, Polysomnography, Sleep Stages physiology
- Abstract
Study Objectives: To compare the accuracy of automatic sleep staging based on heart rate variability measured from photoplethysmography (PPG) combined with body movements measured with an accelerometer, with polysomnography (PSG) and actigraphy., Methods: Using wrist-worn PPG to analyze heart rate variability and an accelerometer to measure body movements, sleep stages and sleep statistics were automatically computed from overnight recordings. Sleep-wake, 4-class (wake/N1 + N2/N3/REM) and 3-class (wake/NREM/REM) classifiers were trained on 135 simultaneously recorded PSG and PPG recordings of 101 healthy participants and validated on 80 recordings of 51 healthy middle-aged adults. Epoch-by-epoch agreement and sleep statistics were compared with actigraphy for a subset of the validation set., Results: The sleep-wake classifier obtained an epoch-by-epoch Cohen's κ between PPG and PSG sleep stages of 0.55 ± 0.14, sensitivity to wake of 58.2 ± 17.3%, and accuracy of 91.5 ± 5.1%. κ and sensitivity were significantly higher than with actigraphy (0.40 ± 0.15 and 45.5 ± 19.3%, respectively). The 3-class classifier achieved a κ of 0.46 ± 0.15 and accuracy of 72.9 ± 8.3%, and the 4-class classifier, a κ of 0.42 ± 0.12 and accuracy of 59.3 ± 8.5%., Conclusions: The moderate epoch-by-epoch agreement and, in particular, the good agreement in terms of sleep statistics suggest that this technique is promising for long-term sleep monitoring, although more evidence is needed to understand whether it can complement PSG in clinical practice. It also offers an improvement in sleep/wake detection over actigraphy for healthy individuals, although this must be confirmed on a larger, clinical population., (© Sleep Research Society 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2017
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