Litcius/Paper detail

Entropy Analysis of COVID-19 Cardiovascular Signals

Dragana Bajić, Vlado Đajić, Branislav Milovanović

2021Entropy28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The world has faced a coronavirus outbreak, which, in addition to lung complications, has caused other serious problems, including cardiovascular. There is still no explanation for the mechanisms of coronavirus that trigger dysfunction of the cardiac autonomic nervous system (ANS). We believe that the complex mechanisms that change the status of ANS could only be solved by advanced multidimensional analysis of many variables, obtained both from the original cardiovascular signals and from laboratory analysis and detailed patient history. The aim of this paper is to analyze different measures of entropy as potential dimensions of the multidimensional space of cardiovascular data. The measures were applied to heart rate and systolic blood pressure signals collected from 116 patients with COVID-19 and 77 healthy controls. Methods that indicate a statistically significant difference between patients with different levels of infection and healthy controls will be used for further multivariate research. As a result, it was shown that a statistically significant difference between healthy controls and patients with COVID-19 was shown by sample entropy applied to integrated transformed probability signals, common symbolic dynamics entropy, and copula parameters. Statistical significance between serious and mild patients with COVID-19 can only be achieved by cross-entropies of heart rate signals and systolic pressure. This result contributes to the hypothesis that the severity of COVID-19 disease is associated with ANS disorder and encourages further research.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Multivariate statisticsMedicineCoronavirusHeart rateEntropy (arrow of time)Blood pressureMultivariate analysisCardiologyHeart rate variabilitySample entropyInternal medicineApproximate entropyDiseaseStatisticsMathematicsTime seriesInfectious disease (medical specialty)PhysicsQuantum mechanicsHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic ControlComplex Systems and Time Series AnalysisAdvanced Chemical Sensor Technologies