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DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals (PhysioNet)

DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

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Page 1: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

DIMACS April, 2002

Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine

Ary L. Goldberger, M.D.

Harvard Medical School

NIH/NCRR Research Resource for

Complex Physiologic Signals (PhysioNet)

Page 2: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

A Time Series Challenge:

Heart Failure Heart Failure

Normal Atrial Fibrillation

Heart Rate Dynamics in Health and DiseaseWhich time series is normal?

Page 3: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Cardiac Electrical System

Page 4: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

How is Heart Rate Dynamics Regulated?Coupled Feedback Systems Operating Over Wide Range of Temporal/Spatial Scales

Page 5: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Three Themes

• Healthy systems show complex dynamics, with long-range (fractal) correlations and multiscale nonlinear interactions.

• Life-threatening pathologies and aging are associated with breakdown of fractal scaling and loss of nonlinear complexity.

• Open-source databases and software tools are needed to catalyze advances in complex signal analysis.

Page 6: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Hallmarks of Complexity

• Nonstationarity• Statistics change with time

• Nonlinearity• Components interact in unexpected ways ( “cross-talk” )

• Multiscale Variability• Fluctuations may have fractal properties

Healthy Heart Rate Dynamics

Page 7: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Is the Physiologic World Linear or Nonlinear?

• Linear World:• Things add up• Proportionality of input/output• High predictability, no surprises

• Nonlinear World:• Whole sum of parts (“emergent” properties)• Small changes may have huge effects• Low predictability, anomalous behaviors

Page 8: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

What’s Wrong with this Type ofSignal Transduction Picture?

Answer: No feedback; No nonlinearityComplicated! but …Complex dynamics missing!

Page 9: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

*** Danger ***

Linear Fallacy: Widely-held assumption that biologicalsystems can be largely understood by dissecting out micro-components and analyzing them in isolation.

“Rube Goldberg physiology”

Page 10: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Nonlinear/Fractal Mechanisms in Physiology

• Bad news: your data are complex!

• Good news: there are certain generic mechanisms that do not depend on details of system (universalities)

Page 11: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Wonderful World of Complexity:

• Abrupt changes• Bifurcations

• Bursting

• Bistability

• Hysteresis• Nonlinear oscillations• Multiscale (fractal) variability• Deterministic chaos

• Nonlinear waves: spirals; scrolls; solitons

• Stochastic resonance • Time irreversibility• Complex networks• Emergent properties

Sampler of Nonlinear Mechanisms in Physiology

Ref: Goldberger et al. PNAS 2002 99 Suppl. 1: 2466-2472.

Page 12: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Six Examples ofSpiral Waves in Excitable Media

From: J. Walleczek, ed. Self-Organized Biological Dynamics and Nonlinear ControlCambridge University Press, 2000.

Page 13: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Fractal: A tree-like object or process, composed ofsub-units (and sub-sub-units, etc) that resemble thelarger scale structure.

This internal look-alike property is known asself-similarity or scale-invariance.

Multiscale Complexity and Fractals

Page 14: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Fractal Self-Organization:Coronary Artery Tree

Page 15: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Fractal Self-Organization:His-Purkinje Conduction Network

Page 16: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Fractal Self-Organization:Purkinje Cells in Cerebellum

Page 17: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Fractal: A tree-like object or process, composed ofsub-units (and sub-sub-units, etc) that resemble thelarger scale structure.

This internal look-alike property is known asself-similarity or scale-invariance.

Multiscale Complexity and Fractals

Page 18: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Loss of Multiscale Fractal Complexitywith Aging & Disease

Single Scale Periodicity Uncorrelated Randomness

Two Patterns ofPathologic Breakdown

Healthy Dynamics: Multiscale Fractal Variability

Lancet 1996; 347:1312Nature 1999; 399:461

Page 19: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Fractal Analysis of Nonstationary Time Series

Page 20: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Fractal Scaling in Health and Disease

Page 21: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Why is it Healthy to be Fractal?

• Healthy function requires capability to cope with unpredictable environments

• Fractal systems generate broad repertoire of response adaptability

• Absence of characteristic time scale helps prevent mode-locking (pathologic resonances)

Page 22: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

• The output of many systems becomes more regular and predictable with pathologic perturbations

• Clinical medicine not feasible without such stereotypic, predictable behaviors – clinicians look for characteristic patterns/scales

• Healthy function: multi-scale dynamics/scale-free behavior harder to characterize

Concept ofDE-COMPLEXIFICATION OF DISEASE

Page 23: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Loss of Fractal ComplexityResolves Clinical Paradox

Patients with wide range of disorders often display strikingly predictable (ordered) dynamics

Reorder vs. Disorder

Examples: Parkinsonism / TremorsObsessive-compulsive behaviorNystagmusCheyne-Stokes breathingObstructive sleep apneaVentricular TachycardiaHyperkalemia “Sine-wave” ECGCyclic neutropeniaetc., etc.

Page 24: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource
Page 25: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Warning!

Excessive Regularity is Bad For Your HealthExample: Photic (Stroboscopic) Stimulation and Seizures

Page 26: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

What’s the Cure?

Page 27: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

• Physiologic dynamics exhibit an extraordinary range of complexity that defies:

• Conventional statistics• Homeostatic models

• Important information hidden incomplex signal fluctuations relating to:

• Basic signaling mechanisms• Novel biomarkers

Finding and Using Hidden Information

Page 28: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

The Bad News for Complex Signal Analysis

• Databases are largely unavailable

or incompletely documented

• Investigators use different, undocumented software tools on different databases

“ Babel-ography ”

Page 29: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

www.physionet.orgStart date: September 1, 1999

100,000+ visits to date1 terabyte of data downloaded!

NCRR Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals - “PhysioNet”

Page 30: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

PhysioNet• Dissemination portal• Tutorials• Discussion Groups

Design of the PhysioNet Resource

Page 31: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

PhysioBank• Reference Datasets

•Multi-Parameter (e.g. sleep apnea; intensive care unit)

•ECG•Gait•Other Neurological•Images

• Data supporting publications• 30+ gigabytes currently online• 1+ terabytes online in 2003

Design of the PhysioNet Resource

Page 32: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

PhysioToolkit• Open source software• Data analysis packages• Physiologic models• Software from publications

Design of the PhysioNet Resource

Page 33: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

PhysioNet Signal Analysis Competitions

• Challenge 2001:Can you forecast an imminentcardiac arrhythmia (atrial fibrillation) during normal cardiac rhythm?

• Challenge 2002:Can you simulate/model complex healthyheart rate variability?

• Future:Seizure forecasting; Biomedical image processing, etc.

Page 34: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

• Homeostasis revisited:

Physiologic control

Complex (fractal/nonlinear) dynamics

• Loss of fractal/nonlinear complexity:New markers of life-threatening pathology/aging

• Needed: Open-source data and software for basic mechanisms and bedside diagnostics

Conclusions

Page 35: DIMACS April, 2002 Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Complexity in Bedside Medicine Ary L. Goldberger, M.D. Harvard Medical School NIH/NCRR Research Resource

Welcome to PhysioNet!

www.physionet.org

Please visit and contribute