%0 Journal Article %T Hands-off Intervals during Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Duration and Effect on the ECG Analysis %A Krasteva V. %A Jekova I. %A Stoyanov T. %A Didon JP. %J Bioautomation %D 2009 %I %X Recent works are aimed at development of shock advisory systems (SAS) for automated external defibrillators (AEDs), which continuously analyze the electrocardiogram (ECG) during non-interrupted chest compressions (CC). Being also part of the cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), small 'hands-off' intervals (CC pauses) for insufflations are interrupting the CC, and thus the SAS analysis process. This study is applied on 530 CC-contaminated ECG strips taken from 168 patients who undergo out-of-hospital resuscitation interventions with AEDs. A statistical study of the short duration CC pauses is performed, showing non-normal distribution with median value of 4 seconds, quartile range between 3 and 5 seconds, min-max range between 1 and 10 seconds. Another focus is the effect of skipping the CC pauses on the SAS accuracy by supplying continuous non-linear CC-corrupted ECG signal for analysis. The SAS is tested with different coupling intervals [t1, t2], where t1 is the time before the CC pause, t2 is the time after the CC pause, t1+t2=10 seconds. The SAS accuracy on CC-corrupted linear signals [10s+0s] compared to non-linear signals [9s+1s], [8s+2s], [7s+3s], [6s+4s], [5s+5s] shows insignificant difference (p>0.05) for the different arrhythmia: ventricular fibrillation between 86% and 90.3%, normal rhythms between 88.4% and 93.5%, asystole between 80.4% and 87.3%. Several examples illustrate the performance of the SAS analysis process on various CC artefacts and ECG arrhythmias. %K CPR artefacts %K Cardiac compression pauses %K Shock advisory system %K AED %U http://www.clbme.bas.bg/bioautomation/2009/vol_13.4/files/13.4_1.05.pdf