Time-dependent complexity characterisation of activity patterns in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

Paloma Rabaey, Peter Decat, Stefan Heytens, Dirk Vogelaers, An Mariman, Thomas Demeester
Author Information
  1. Paloma Rabaey: IDLab, Department of Information Technology, Ghent University - imec, Ghent, Belgium. paloma.rabaey@ugent.be. ORCID
  2. Peter Decat: Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
  3. Stefan Heytens: Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
  4. Dirk Vogelaers: Center of Integrative Medicine, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University Hospital Ghent, Ghent, Belgium.
  5. An Mariman: Center of Integrative Medicine, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University Hospital Ghent, Ghent, Belgium.
  6. Thomas Demeester: IDLab, Department of Information Technology, Ghent University - imec, Ghent, Belgium.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patients suffer from symptoms that cannot be explained by a single underlying biological cause. It is sometimes claimed that these symptoms are a manifestation of a disrupted autonomic nervous system. Prior works studying this claim from the complex adaptive systems perspective, have observed a lower average complexity of physical activity patterns in chronic fatigue syndrome patients compared to healthy controls. To further study the robustness of such methods, we investigate the within-patient changes in complexity of activity over time. Furthermore, we explore how these changes might be related to changes in patient functioning.
METHODS: We propose an extension of the allometric aggregation method, which characterises the complexity of a physiological signal by quantifying the evolution of its fractal dimension. We use it to investigate the temporal variations in within-patient complexity. To this end, physical activity patterns of 7 patients diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome were recorded over a period of 3 weeks. These recordings are accompanied by physicians' judgements in terms of the patients' weekly functioning.
RESULTS: We report significant within-patient variations in complexity over time. The obtained metrics are shown to depend on the range of timescales for which these are evaluated. We were unable to establish a consistent link between complexity and functioning on a week-by-week basis for the majority of the patients.
CONCLUSIONS: The considerable within-patient variations of the fractal dimension across scales and time force us to question the utility of previous studies that characterise long-term activity signals using a single static complexity metric. The complexity of a Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patient's physical activity signal does not suffice to characterise their high-level functioning over time and has limited potential as an objective monitoring metric by itself.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. 170122N/Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Word Cloud

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