Abstract
It is well established that fetal and maternal electrocardiograms (ECGs) can be obtained from the maternal abdomen using standard surface electrodes, although this cannot be guaranteed. The unobtrusive and non-invasive nature of such monitoring lends itself naturally to the long-term ambulatory collection of this data on cardiac activity. By employing suitable algorithms it would then be possible to extract records of both fetal and maternal heart rate. This article presents results of the collection of raw electrophysiological signals, containing both fetal and maternal ECGs from a single volunteer from the 20th week of gestation until term. The significance of the data is that they were recorded by the mother herself in her own environment. Previously written software was then used to extract fetal and maternal heart rate data. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using this method for the long-term recording of fetal and maternal heart rate in the mother's normal surroundings.