AI Article Synopsis

  • Transcutaneous electrical stimulation uses electrodes on the skin to deliver electrical impulses that can activate nerve or muscle cells, and the effectiveness depends on the electrode-skin impedance.
  • A new dynamic impedance model is introduced that accommodates a wide range of stimulation intensities, taking into account electroporation and other charge-dependent effects.
  • The model's accuracy is supported by high coefficients of determination in simulations, making it adaptable for various electrical stimulation applications and electrode configurations.

Article Abstract

Transcutaneous electrical stimulation can depolarize nerve or muscle cells applying impulses through electrodes attached on the skin. For these applications, the electrode-skin impedance is an important factor which influences effectiveness. Various models describe the interface using constant or current-depending resistive-capacitive equivalent circuit. Here, we develop a dynamic impedance model valid for a wide range stimulation intensities. The model considers electroporation and charge-dependent effects to describe the impedance variation, which allows to describe high-charge pulses. The parameters were adjusted based on rectangular, biphasic stimulation pulses generated by a stimulator, providing optionally current or voltage-controlled impulses, and applied through electrodes of different sizes. Both control methods deliver a different electrical field to the tissue, which is constant throughout the impulse duration for current-controlled mode or have a very current peak for voltage-controlled. The results show a predominant dependence in the current intensity in the case of both stimulation techniques that allows to keep a simple model. A verification simulation using the proposed dynamic model shows coefficient of determination of around 0.99 in both stimulation types. The presented method for fitting electrode-skin impedance can be simple extended to other stimulation waveforms and electrode configuration. Therefore, it can be embedded in optimization algorithms for designing electrical stimulation applications even for pulses with high charges and high current spikes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4420281PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0125609PLOS

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