Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
April 2010
Respiratory diseases are among the most important and serious conditions that can affect the newborn baby. A cessation of breathing, longer than 15 seconds, or accompanied by hypoxia or bradycardia, is called apnea of prematurity (AOP) and has been found in more than 50% of premature infants. An apnea detector used in infant monitoring has been designed and constructed and is intended to be applied in a clinical environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Impedance measurement of cardiac output has struggled to become established partly because there have been only a few attempts to establish a sound theoretical basis for this measurement. Our objective is to demonstrate that there is valuable aortic flow information available from an intrathoracic impedance signal which may eventually be useful in the measurement of cardiac output by impedance technology.
Methods: A model, using dual impedance measurement electrodes and the change in impedance when blood flows, has been developed based on an intrathoracic impedance model of the descending aorta and esophagus.
In this paper, we describe the theory and practical implementation of an electrical impedance probe for making in vivo measurements of the electrical admittance of living tissue. The probe uses concentric annular electrodes and is shown to sample a more localized, yet greater, volume of tissue than the standard four-electrode probe. We have developed a mathematical model for the conduction of current between the probe electrodes assuming that we are investigating a uniform, isotropic, semi-infinite region and taking into account the contact impedance between the electrodes and the organ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF