Potassium disorders are generally asymptomatic, potentially lethal, and common in patients with renal or cardiac disease. The morphology of the electrocardiogram (ECG) signal is very sensitive to the changes in potassium ions, so ECG has a high potential for detecting dyskalemias before laboratory results. In this regard, this paper introduces a new system for ECG-based potassium measurement. The proposed system consists of three main steps. First, cohort selection & data labeling were carried out by using a 5- minute interval between ECGs and potassium measurements and defining three labels: hypokalemia, normal, and hyperkalemia. After that, feature extraction & selection were performed. The extracted features are RR interval, PR interval, QRS duration, QT interval, QTc interval, P axis, QRS axis, T axis, and ACCI. Kruskal-Wallis technique was also used to assess the importance of the features and to select discriminative ones. Finally, an ANFIS model based on FCM clustering (FCM-ANFIS) was designed based on the selected features. The used database is ECG-ViEW II. Results showed that T axis compared with other features has a significant relationship with potassium levels (P<0.01, r=0.62). The absolute error of FCM-ANFIS is 0.4+-0.3 mM, its mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) is 9.99%, and its r-squared value is 0.74. Its classification accuracy is 85.71%. In detecting hypokalemia and hyperkalemia, the sensitivities are 60% and 80%, respectively, and the specificities are 100% and 97.3%, respectively. This research has shed light on the design of noninvasive instruments to measure potassium concentration and to detect dyskalemias, thereby reducing cardiac events.
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