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Christian Høyer

Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease

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Standard

Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease. / Høyer, Christian; Nielsen, Nikolaj Schandorph; Jordansen, Malene Kragh Overvad et al.
In: Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation, Vol. 77, No. 8, 12.2017, p. 622-627.

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Høyer, C, Nielsen, NS, Jordansen, MKO & Zacho, HD 2017, 'Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease', Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation, vol. 77, no. 8, pp. 622-627. https://doi.org/10.1080/00365513.2017.1390784

APA

Høyer, C., Nielsen, N. S., Jordansen, M. K. O., & Zacho, H. D. (2017). Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease. Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation, 77(8), 622-627. https://doi.org/10.1080/00365513.2017.1390784

CBE

Høyer C, Nielsen NS, Jordansen MKO, Zacho HD. 2017. Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease. Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation. 77(8):622-627. https://doi.org/10.1080/00365513.2017.1390784

MLA

Vancouver

Høyer C, Nielsen NS, Jordansen MKO, Zacho HD. Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease. Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation. 2017 Dec;77(8):622-627. doi: 10.1080/00365513.2017.1390784

Author

Høyer, Christian ; Nielsen, Nikolaj Schandorph ; Jordansen, Malene Kragh Overvad et al. / Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease. In: Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation. 2017 ; Vol. 77, No. 8. pp. 622-627.

Bibtex

@article{58c4891f79414adabacae5ef25faa141,
title = "Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease",
abstract = "AIM: To examine the interchangeability of two methods for distal pressure measurement based on photoplethysmography using a truncated or full display of the arterial inflow curve, respectively.METHODS: Toe and ankle pressures were obtained from 69 patients suspected of peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Observer reproducibility of the curve readings was examined by blinded reassessment of the pressure curves in a randomly selected subgroup (60 limbs).RESULTS: There were no significant differences in mean pressures between the two methods (p for all > .455). The limits of agreement for the differences were -15.0-15.4 mmHg for right toe pressures, -16.3-16.2 mmHg for left toe pressures, -14.2-15.7 mmHg for right ankle pressures, and -18.3-17.7 mmHg for left ankle pressures. Correlation analysis revealed intraclass correlation coefficients ≥0.960 for all measuring sites. Cohen's Kappa showed excellent agreement in diagnostic classification, with κ = 0.930 for the diagnosis of PAD and perfect agreement in the diagnosis of critical limb ischemia (κ = 1.000). The analysis of intra-observer variation for curve reading showed limits of agreement of -3.9-4.0 for toe pressures and -7.6-7.7 for ankle pressures for the method involving truncated display and -3.1-3.2 for toe pressures and -6.3-8.6 for ankle pressures for the method involving full display of the signal.CONCLUSION: The present study shows minimal differences in diagnostic classification, as well as in ankle and toe pressures, between the full display and the truncated display of the photoplethysmographic pulse signal. Furthermore, the inter-observer variation was low for both of the photoplethysmographic methods investigated.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Christian H{\o}yer and Nielsen, {Nikolaj Schandorph} and Jordansen, {Malene Kragh Overvad} and Zacho, {Helle Damgaard}",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1080/00365513.2017.1390784",
language = "English",
volume = "77",
pages = "622--627",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation",
issn = "0036-5513",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis ",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Comparison of two methods based on photoplethysmography for the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease

AU - Høyer, Christian

AU - Nielsen, Nikolaj Schandorph

AU - Jordansen, Malene Kragh Overvad

AU - Zacho, Helle Damgaard

PY - 2017/12

Y1 - 2017/12

N2 - AIM: To examine the interchangeability of two methods for distal pressure measurement based on photoplethysmography using a truncated or full display of the arterial inflow curve, respectively.METHODS: Toe and ankle pressures were obtained from 69 patients suspected of peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Observer reproducibility of the curve readings was examined by blinded reassessment of the pressure curves in a randomly selected subgroup (60 limbs).RESULTS: There were no significant differences in mean pressures between the two methods (p for all > .455). The limits of agreement for the differences were -15.0-15.4 mmHg for right toe pressures, -16.3-16.2 mmHg for left toe pressures, -14.2-15.7 mmHg for right ankle pressures, and -18.3-17.7 mmHg for left ankle pressures. Correlation analysis revealed intraclass correlation coefficients ≥0.960 for all measuring sites. Cohen's Kappa showed excellent agreement in diagnostic classification, with κ = 0.930 for the diagnosis of PAD and perfect agreement in the diagnosis of critical limb ischemia (κ = 1.000). The analysis of intra-observer variation for curve reading showed limits of agreement of -3.9-4.0 for toe pressures and -7.6-7.7 for ankle pressures for the method involving truncated display and -3.1-3.2 for toe pressures and -6.3-8.6 for ankle pressures for the method involving full display of the signal.CONCLUSION: The present study shows minimal differences in diagnostic classification, as well as in ankle and toe pressures, between the full display and the truncated display of the photoplethysmographic pulse signal. Furthermore, the inter-observer variation was low for both of the photoplethysmographic methods investigated.

AB - AIM: To examine the interchangeability of two methods for distal pressure measurement based on photoplethysmography using a truncated or full display of the arterial inflow curve, respectively.METHODS: Toe and ankle pressures were obtained from 69 patients suspected of peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Observer reproducibility of the curve readings was examined by blinded reassessment of the pressure curves in a randomly selected subgroup (60 limbs).RESULTS: There were no significant differences in mean pressures between the two methods (p for all > .455). The limits of agreement for the differences were -15.0-15.4 mmHg for right toe pressures, -16.3-16.2 mmHg for left toe pressures, -14.2-15.7 mmHg for right ankle pressures, and -18.3-17.7 mmHg for left ankle pressures. Correlation analysis revealed intraclass correlation coefficients ≥0.960 for all measuring sites. Cohen's Kappa showed excellent agreement in diagnostic classification, with κ = 0.930 for the diagnosis of PAD and perfect agreement in the diagnosis of critical limb ischemia (κ = 1.000). The analysis of intra-observer variation for curve reading showed limits of agreement of -3.9-4.0 for toe pressures and -7.6-7.7 for ankle pressures for the method involving truncated display and -3.1-3.2 for toe pressures and -6.3-8.6 for ankle pressures for the method involving full display of the signal.CONCLUSION: The present study shows minimal differences in diagnostic classification, as well as in ankle and toe pressures, between the full display and the truncated display of the photoplethysmographic pulse signal. Furthermore, the inter-observer variation was low for both of the photoplethysmographic methods investigated.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1080/00365513.2017.1390784

DO - 10.1080/00365513.2017.1390784

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29043840

VL - 77

SP - 622

EP - 627

JO - Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation

JF - Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation

SN - 0036-5513

IS - 8

ER -