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Principles of Biomedical Systems

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Electrode gel on skin: 10.8 kO / cm2. Penetrated skin: 200 O / cm2 ... biopotential electrode gel, electronic thermometers placed in ears, mouth, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Principles of Biomedical Systems


1
Principles of Biomedical Systems Devices
Safety in Clinical Environment
2
Safety in Clinical Environment
  • Definitions
  • Safety freedom from unacceptable risk of harm.
  • Basic Safety Protection against direct physical
    hazards when medical electrical equipment is used
    under normal or other reasonably foreseeable
    conditions.
  • Hazard A situation of potential harm to people
    or property.
  • Risk The probable rate of occurrence of a
    hazard causing harm and the degree of severity of
    the harm.
  • Effectiveness the ability of an item to meet a
    service demand of given quantitative
    characteristics.
  • Safety Integrity Level A qualitative measure of
    the level of assurance that a component or system
    will function as intended or, if it malfunctions,
    will do so in a safe manner

3
Types of Hazards
  • Electrical hazards
  • Electrical shocks (micro and macro) due to
    equipment failure, failure of power delivery
    systems, ground failures, burns, fire, etc.
  • Mechanical hazards
  • mobility aids, transfer devices, prosthetic
    devices, mechanical assist devices, patient
    support devices
  • Environmental hazards
  • Solid wastes, noise, utilities (natural gas),
    building structures, etc.
  • Biological hazards
  • Infection control, viral outbreak, isolation,
    decontamination, sterilization, waste disposal
    issues
  • Radiation hazards
  • Use of radioactive materials, radiation devices
    (MRI, CT, PET), exposure control

4
Types of Hazards
  • Many sources of energy, potentially hazardous
    substances, instruments and procedures
  • Use of fire, compressed air, water, chemicals,
    drugs, microorganisms, waste, sound, electricity,
    radiation, natural and unnatural disaster,
    negligence, sources of radiation, etc.
  • Medical procedures expose patients to increased
    risks of hazards due to skin and membranes being
    penetrated / altered
  • 10,000 device related injuries in the US every
    year! Typically due to
  • Improper use
  • Inadequate training
  • Lack of experience
  • Improper (lack of) use of manuals
  • Device failure

5
Electrical Safety
  • Safety in the clinical environment Electrical
    safety
  • Physiological effects of electricity
  • Susceptibility parameters
  • Distribution of electrical power
  • Isolated power systems
  • Macroshock hazards
  • Microshock hazards
  • Electrical safety codes and standards
  • Protection
  • Power distribution
  • Ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCI)
  • Equipment design
  • Electrical safety analyzers / Testing electrical
    systems

6
Physiological Effects of Electricity
  • For electricity to have an effect on the human
    body
  • An electrical potential difference must be
    present
  • The individual must be part of the electrical
    circuit, that is, a current must enter the body
    at one point and leave it at another.
  • However, what causes the physiological effect is
    NOT voltage, but rather CURRENT.
  • A high voltage (K.103V) applied over a large
    impedance (rough skin) may not cause much (any)
    damage
  • A low voltage applied over very small impedances
    (heart tissue) may cause grave consequences
    (ventricular fibrillation)
  • The magnitude of the current is simply the
    applied voltage divided by the total effective
    impedance the current faces skin largest.
  • Electricity can have one of three effects
  • Electrical stimulation of excitable tissue
    (muscles, nerve)
  • Resistive heating of tissue
  • Electrical burns / tissue damage for direct
    current and high voltages

7
Physiological Effects of Electricity
The real physiological effect depends on the
actual path of the current
Dry skin impedance93 kO / cm2 Electrode gel on
skin 10.8 kO / cm2 Penetrated skin 200 O / cm2
Physiological effects of electricity. Threshold
or estimated mean values are given for each
effect in a 70 kg human for a 1 to 3 s exposure
to 60 Hz current applied via copper wires grasped
by the hands.
8
Physiological Effects of Electricity
  • Threshold of perception The minimal current that
    an individual can detect. For AC (with wet hands)
    can be as small as 0.5 mA at 60 Hz. For DC, 2 10
    mA
  • Let-go current The maximal current at which the
    subject can voluntarily withdraw. 6 100 mA, at
    which involuntary muscle contractions, reflex
    withdrawals, secondary physical effects (falling,
    hitting head) may also occur
  • Respiratory Paralysis / Pain / Fatigue At as low
    as 20 mA, involuntary contractions of respiratory
    muscles can cause asphyxiation / respiratory
    arrest, if the current is not interrupted.
    Strong involuntary contraction of other muscles
    can cause pain and fatigue
  • Ventricular fibrillation 75 400 mA can cause
    heart muscles to contract uncontrollably,
    altering the normal propagation of the
    electrical activity of the heart. HR can raise up
    to 300 bpm, rapid, disorganized and too high to
    pump any meaningful amount of blood ? ventricular
    fibrillation. Normal rhythm can only return using
    a defibrillator
  • Sustained myocardial contraction / Burns and
    physical injury At 1 6 A, the entire heart
    muscle contracts and heart stops beating. This
    will not cause irreversible tissue damage,
    however, as normal rhythm will return once the
    current is removed. At or after 10A, however,
    burns can occur, particularly at points of entry
    and exit.

9
Important Susceptibility Parameters
  • Threshold and let-go current variability

Distributions of perception thresholds and let-go
currents These data depend on surface area of
contact, moistened hand grasping AWG No. 8 copper
wire, 70 kg human, 60Hz, 13 s. of exposure
10
Important Susceptibility Parameters
  • Frequency
  • Note that the minimal let-go current happens at
    the precise frequency of commercial power-line,
    50-60Hz.
  • Let-go current rises below 10 Hz and above
    several hundred Hz.

Let-go current versus frequency Percentile
values indicate variability of let-go current
among individuals. Let-go currents for women are
about two-thirds the values for men.
11
Important Susceptibility Parameters
  • Duration
  • The longer the duration, the smaller the current
    at which ventricular fibrillation occurs
  • Shock must occur long enough to coincide with the
    most vulnerable period occurring during the T
    wave.
  • Weight
  • Fibrillation threshold increases with body weight
    (from 50mA for 6kg dogs to 130 mA for 24 kg dogs.

Fibrillation current versus shock duration.
Thresholds for ventricular fibrillation in
animals for 60 Hz AC current. Duration of current
(0.2 to 5 s) and weight of animal body were
varied.
12
Important Susceptibility Parameters
  • Points of entry
  • The magnitude of the current required to
    fibrillate the heart is far greater if the
    current is not applied directly to heart
    externally applied current loses much of its
    amplitude due to current distributions. Large,
    externally applied currents cause macroshock.
  • If catheters are used, the natural protection
    provided by the skin (15 kO 2 MO) is bypassed,
    greatly reducing the amount of current reqd to
    cause fibrillation. Even smallest currents (80
    600 µA), causing microshock, may result in
    fibrillation. Safety limit for microshocks is 10
    µA.
  • The precise point of entry, even externally is
    very important If both points of entry and exit
    are on the same extremity, the risk of
    fibrillation is greatly reduced even at high
    currents (e.g. the current reqd for fibrillation
    through Lead I (LA-RA) electrodes is higher than
    for Leads II (LL-RA) and III (LL-LA).

13
Important Susceptibility Parameters
  • Points of entry

Effect of entry points on current distribution
(a) Macroshock, externally applied current
spreads through-out the body. (b) Microshock, all
the current applied through an intracardiac
catheter flows through the heart.
14
Distribution of Electrical Power
(230 V)
Simplified electric-power distribution for 115 V
circuits. Power frequency is 60 Hz
15
Distribution of Power
  • If electrical devices were perfect, only two
    wires would be adequate (hot and return), with
    all power confined to these two wires. However,
    there are two major departures from this ideal
    case
  • A fault may occur, through miswiring, component
    failure, etc., causing an electrical potential
    between an exposed surface (metal casing of the
    device) and a grounded surface (wet floor, metal
    case of another device etc.) Any person who
    bridges these two surfaces is subject to
    macroshock.
  • Even if a fault does not occur, imperfect
    insulation or electromagnetic coupling
    (capacitive or inductive) may produce an
    electrical potential relative to the ground. A
    susceptible patient providing a path for this
    leakage current to flow to the ground is subject
    to microshock.
  • The additional ground line provides a good line
    of defense! (how / why?)

16
GROUND!
  • The additional line that is connected directly to
    the earth-ground provides the following
  • In case of a fault (short circuit between hot
    conductor and metal casing), a large current will
    use the path through the ground wire (instead of
    the patient) and not only protect the patient,
    but also cause the circuit breaker to open. The
    ability of the grounding system to conduct high
    currents to ground is crucial for this to work!
  • If there is no fault, the ground wire serves to
    conduct the leakage current safely back to the
    electrical power source again, as long as the
    grounding system provides a low-resistance
    pathway to the ground
  • Leakage current recommended by ECRI are
    established to prevent injury in case the
    grounding system fails and a patient touches an
    electrically active surface (10 100 µA).

17
Isolated Power Distribution
Not grounded !
  • In fact, in such an isolated system, if a single
    ground-fault occurs, the system simply reverts
    back to the normal ground-referenced system.
  • A line isolation monitor is used with such
    system that continuously monitors for the first
    ground fault, during which case it simply informs
    the operators to fix the problem. The single
    ground fault does NOT constitute a hazard!
  • Normally, when there is a ground-fault from hot
    wire to ground, a large current is drawn causing
    a potential hazard, as the device will stop
    functioning when the circuit breakers open !
  • This can be prevented by using the isolated
    system, which separates ground from neutral,
    making neutral and hot electrically identical. A
    single ground-fault will not cause large
    currents, as long as both hot conductors are
    initially isolated from ground!

18
Macroshock
  • Most electrical devices have a metal cabinet,
    which constitutes a hazard, in case of an
    insulation failure or shortened component between
    the hot power lead and the chassis. There is then
    115 230 V between the chassis and any other
    grounded object.
  • The first line of defense available to patients
    is their skin.
  • The outer layer provides 15 kO to 1 MO depending
    on the part of the body, moisture and sweat
    present, 1 of that of dry skin if skin is
    broken,
  • Internal resistance of the body is 200O for each
    limb, and 100O for the trunk, thus internal body
    resistance between any two limbs is about 500O
    (somewhat higher for obese people due to high
    resistivity of the adipose tissue)!
  • Any procedure that reduces or eliminates the skin
    resistance increases the risk of electrical
    shock, including biopotential electrode gel,
    electronic thermometers placed in ears, mouth,
    rectum, intravenous catheters, etc.
  • A third wire, grounded to earth, can greatly
    reduce the effect of macroshock, as the
    resistance of that path would be much smaller
    then even that of internal body resistance!

19
Macroshock Hazards
  • Direct faults between the hot conductor and the
    ground is not common, and technically
    speaking, ground connection is not necessary
    during normal operation.
  • In fact, a ground fault will not be detected
    during normal operation of the device, only
    when someone touches it, the hazard becomes
    known. Therefore, ground wire in devices and
    receptacles must be periodically tested.

20
Macroshock Hazards
21
Microshock Hazards
Small currents inevitably flow between adjacent
insulated conductors at different potentials ?
leakage currents which flow through stray
capacitances, insulation, dust and
moisture Leakage current flowing to the chassis
flows safely to the ground, if a low-resistance
ground wire is available.
22
Microshock Hazards
  • If ground wire is broken, the chassis potential
    rises above the ground a patient who has a
    grounded connection to the heart (e.g. through a
    catheter) receives a microshock if s/he touches
    the chassis.
  • If there is a connection from the chassis to the
    patients heart, and a connection to the ground
    anywhere in the body, this also causes
    microshock.
  • Note that the hazard for microshock only exists
    if there is a direct connection to the heart.
    Otherwise, even the internal resistance of the
    body is high enough top prevent the microshocks.

23
Microshock via Ground Potentials
Microshocks can also occur if different devices
are not at the exact same ground potential. In
fact, the microshock can occur even when a device
that does not connected to the patient has a
ground fault! A fairly common ground wire
resistance of 0.1O can easily cause a a
500mVpotential difference if initiated due to
a, say 5A of ground fault. If the patient
resistance is lessthen 50kO, this would cause an
above safe current of 10µA
24
Microshock Via Ground Potentials
25
Safety Codes Standards
  • Limits on leakage current are instituted and
    regulated by the safety codes instituted in part
    by the National Fire Protection Association
    (NFPA), American National Standards Institute
    (ANSI), Association for the Advancement of
    Medical Instrumentation (AAMI), and Emergency
    Care Research Institute (ECRI).

26
Basic Approaches to Shock Protection
  • There are two major ways to protect patients from
    shocks
  • Completely isolate and insulate patient from all
    sources of electric current
  • Keep all conductive surfaces within reach of the
    patient at the same voltage
  • Neither can be fully achieved ? some combination
    of these two
  • Grounding system
  • Isolated power-distribution system
  • Ground-fault circuit interrupters (GFCI)

27
Grounding Systems
  • Low resistance (0.15 O) ground that can carry
    currents up to the circuit-breaker ratings
    protects patients by keeping all conductive
    surfaces and receptacle grounds at the same
    potential.
  • Protects patients from
  • Macroshocks
  • Microshocks
  • Ground faults elsewhere (!)
  • The difference between the receptacle grounds and
    other surface should be no more then 40 mV)

All the receptacle grounds and conductive
surfaces in the vicinity of the patient are
connected to the patient-equipment grounding
point. Each patient-equipment grounding point is
connected to the reference grounding point that
makes a single connection to the building ground.
28
Isolated Power Systems
  • A good equipotential grounding system cannot
    eliminate large current that may result from
    major ground-faults (which are rather rare).
  • Isolated power systems can protect against such
    major (single) ground faults
  • Provide considerable protection against
    macroshocks, particularly around wet conditions
  • However, they are expensive !
  • Used only at locations where flammable
    anesthetics are used. Additional minor protection
    against microshocks does not justify the high
    cost of these systems to be used everywhere in
    the clinical environment

29
Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters (GFCI)
  • Disconnects source of electric current when a
    ground fault greater than about 6 mA occurs!

When there is no fault, IhotIneutral. The GFCI
detects the difference between these two
currents. If the difference is above a threshold,
that means the rest of the current must be
flowing through elsewhere, either the chassis or
the patient !!!. The detection is done through
the monitoring the voltage induced by the two
coils (hot and neutral) in the differential
transformer!
30
GFCI
The National Electric Code (NEC - 1996) requires
that all circuits serving bathrooms, garages,
outdoor receptacles, swimming pools and
construction sites be fitted with GFCI. Note that
GFCI protect against major ground faults only,
not against microshocks. Patient care areas are
typically not fitted with GFCI, since the loss of
power to life support equipment can also be
equally deadly!
31
Protection through Equipment Design
  • Strain-relief devices for cords, where cord
    enters the equipment and between the cord and
    plug
  • Reduction of leakage current through proper
    layout and insulation to minimize the capacitance
    between all hot conductors and the chassis
  • Double insulation to prevent the contact of the
    patient with the chassis or any other conducting
    surface (outer case being insulating material,
    plastic knobs, etc.)
  • Operation at low voltages solid state devices
    operating at lt10V are far less likely to cause
    macroshocks
  • Electrical isolation in circuit design

32
Electrical Isolation
  • Main features of an isolation amplifier
  • High ohmic isolation between input and output
    (gt10MO)
  • High isolation mode voltage (gt1000V)
  • High common mode rejection ration (gt100 dB)

33
Transformer Isolation Amplifiers
34
Optical Isolation Amplifier
35
Electrical Safety AnalyzersWiring / Receptacle
Testing
  • Three LED receptacle tester
  • Simple device used to test common wiring problems
    (can detect only 8 of possible 64 states)
  • Will not detect ground/neutral reversal, or when
    ground/neutral are hot and hot is grounded (GFCI
    would detect the latter)

36
Electrical Safety AnalyzersTesting Electrical
Appliances
  • Ground-pin-to-chassis resistance Should be
    lt0.15O during the life of the appliance

Ground-pin-to-chassis resistance test
37
Electrical Safety AnalyzersTesting Electrical
Appliances
  • Chassis leakage current The leakage current
    should not exceed 500µA with single fault for
    devices not intended for patient contact, and not
    exceed 300 µA for those that are intended for
    patient contact.

Appliance power switch (use both OFF and ON
positions)
Open switch for appliances not intended
to contact a patient
Grounding-contact switch (use in OPEN position)
Polarity- reversing switch (use both positions)
Appliance
H (black)
To exposed conductive
H
surface or if none, then 10 by
Internal Circuitry
N
120 V
20 cm metal foil in contact
N (white)
with the exposed surface
G
Insulating surface
G (green)
I
H hot
Building ground
Current meter
N neutral (grounded)
G grounding conductor
Test circuit
This connection
is at service
I
lt 500 µA for facility
Ð
owned housekeeping and maintenance appliances
entrance or on
I
gt 300 µA for appliances intended for use in
the patient vicinity
supply side of
separately derived
system
38
Electrical Safety AnalyzersTesting Electrical
Appliances
  • Leakage current in patient leads
  • Potentially most damaging leakage is the one with
    patient leads, since they typically have low
    impedance patient contacts
  • Current should be restricted to 50µA for
    non-isolated leads and to 10 µA for isolated
    leads (used with catheters / electrodes that make
    connection to the heart)
  • Leakage current between any pair of leads, or
    between a single lead and other patient
    connections should also be controlled
  • Leakage in case of line voltage appearing on the
    patient should also be restricted.

39
Leakage current Testers
Test for leakage current from patient leads to
ground
40
Leakage Current testers
Test for leakage current between patient leads
41
Leakage Current Testers
Test for ac isolation current
Isolation current is the current that passes
through patient leads to ground if and when line
voltage appears on the patient. This should also
be limited to 50µA
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