Title: Lecture 2 ECG Instrumentation
1???? Lecture 2ECG Instrumentation
- ???????? ???
- ??? ????,IEEE Fellow
2The story so far
- The heart pumps blood around the body.
- It has four chambers which contact in a carefully
controlled order (two pairs of contractions) to
achieve this effect.
3The story so far
- The heart pumps blood around the body using a
carefully controlled order of contractions of its
four chambers. - The contraction of a muscle cell is a result of a
depolarisation and repolarisation cycle called an
action potential during which the potential
difference between the inside and the outside of
the cell changes.
4The story so far
- The heart pumps blood around the body using a
carefully controlled order of contractions of its
four chambers. - The contraction of a muscle cell is a result of a
depolarisation and repolarisation cycle called an
action potential during which the potential
difference between the inside and the outside of
the cell changes. - Considering all of the cardiac cells together we
can view the heart as an electrical generator
which drives current into a passive resistive
medium, the thorax. - By taking voltage differences at different points
on the thorax the electrical activity of the
heart can be observed.
5The Electrocardiocgram (ECG)
- Here is an example of an ECG signal
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7Recording the ECG
- To record the ECG we need a transducer capable of
converting the ionic potentials generated within
the body into electronic potentials - Such a transducer is a pair of electrodes
- Polarisable (which behave as capacitors)
- Non-polarisable (behave as resistors)
- Common electrodes lie between these two extremes
8Recording the ECG
- To record the ECG we need a transducer capable of
converting the ionic potentials generated within
the body into electronic potentials - Such a transducer is a pair of electrodes
- Polarisable (which behave as capacitors)
- Non-polarisable (behave as resistors)
- Common electrodes lie between these two extremes
- The electrode most commonly used for ECG signals,
the silver-silver chloride electrode is closer to
a non-polarisable electrode.
9Electrode placement
- There exists a convention prescribing electrode
placement. - "12 lead" ECG placement is a well developed tools
for recording 12 different ECG traces from an
individual - For simple ECG recording, however, a three "lead
combination is possible in which electrodes are
placed on the right arm (RA), the left arm (LA)
and the left leg (LL)
10Electrode placement
- In this context, "lead" means a pair of
electrodes The three electrodes above result in
three possible differences - (Potential at LA) - (Potential at RA)
- (Potential at LL) - (Potential at RA)
- (Potential at LL) - (Potential at LA)
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12Silver-silver chloride electrode
- Electrodes are usually metal disks and a salt of
that metal. - A paste is applied between the electrode and the
skin. - This results in a local solution of the metal in
the paste at the electrode-skin interface. - Ionic equilibrium takes place when the electrical
field is balanced by the concentration gradient
and a layer of Ag ions is adjacent to a layer of
Cl- ions. - This gives a potential drop E called the
half-cell potential (normally 0.8 V for an
Ag-AgCl electrode)
13Silver-silver chloride electrode
- This double layer of charges will also have a
capacitative effect - Since the Ag-AgCl electrode is primarily
non-polarisable there is a large resistive
effect. - This gives a simple model for the electrode.
14Silver-silver chloride electrode
- This double layer of charges will also have a
capacitative effect - Since the Ag-AgCl electrode is primarily
non-polarisable there is a large resistive
effect. - This gives a simple model for the electrode.
- However, the impedance is not infinite at d.c.
and so a resistor must be added in parallel with
the capacitor.
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16Movement artefact
- Movement disturbs the physical positioning of the
ions in the ionic equilibrium. - The half-cell potential will therefore
momentarily change. - The potential difference between two electrodes
will therefore vary. - This variation, which is unrelated to the
underlying signal we wish to observe, is known as
movement artefact - It can be a serious cause of interference in the
measurement of ECG
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18Overall Equivalent circuit
- Using the simple model we used earlier for the
thorax we can build up an overall circuit for the
heart, the body and the electrodes. - The resistors and capacitors may not be exactly
equal. - E and Eshould be very similar.
- Hence V should represent the actual different of
ionic potential between the two points on the
body where the electrodes have been placed.
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20ECG Amplifiers
- The peak output voltage V of our equivalent
circuit is around 1 mV. - Therefore, amplification is required if we are
going to store or display this information in
some way. - There are three problems which must be overcome
which we will now consider
21Electrical Field Interference(Problem 1)
- To put it in hand-waving terms the human body is
a good aerial and so the electrical signal at the
electrodes is not pure, unadulterated, ECG - More specifically, capacitance between power
lines and the system couples current into the
patient, wires and machine.
22Electrical Field Interference
- This capacitance varies but it is of the order of
50pF. - This corresponds to 64mW at 50Hz.
- If the right leg is connected to the common
ground of the amplifier with a contact impedance
of 5k, the mains potential will appear as a 20mV
noise input.
23The solution
- The key is to remember that the ECG is a
differential signal. - The 50Hz noise, however, is common to all the
electrodes. - It appears equally at the Right Arm and Left Arm
terminals. - Rejection therefore depends on the use of a
differential amplifier in the input stage of the
ECG machine. - The amount of rejection depends on the ability of
the amplifier to reject common-mode voltages.
24Differential Amplifiers
- There have been covered in the core course.
- Lets have a look at the standard circuit.
25Differential Amplifier
1
2
1
2
Q Why dont we use this amplifier for ECG
instrumentation?
26Differential (Instrumentation) Amplifer
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28Differential Amplifiers
- So, the standard circuit gives a gain of
- ie a differential gain of
29Differential Amplifiers
- So, the standard circuit gives a gain of
- ie a differential gain of
- and a common-mode gain of
30Differential Amplifiers
- The overall common-mode rejection ratio is given
by
31Magnetic Induction(problem 2)
- Current in magnetic fields induces voltage in the
loop formed by the patient leads - Either
- Lower the magnetic field strength (rather hard)
- Minimise the coil area (eg twist the wires
together)
32Source Impedance Unbalance(problem 3)
- If these impedances are not balanced (ie the
same) then the common-mode voltage of the body
will be higher at one input to the amplifier than
the other. - Hence, a fraction of the common-mode voltage will
be seen as a differential signal. - Therefore, make sure the electrodes are on
correctly!
33The signal
- So, the signal at the input to the amplifier will
have three components - The desired differential ECG signal
- An unwanted common-mode signal
- Unwanted common-mode signal appearing as a
differential input
34The signal
- The output of the amplifier will therefore
consist of three components - The desired output (ECG)
- Unwanted common-mode signal because the
common-mode rejection is not infinite - Unwanted common-mode signal due to source
imbalance
35A Modification
- There is a better approach than setting the
system ground to the common-mode voltage. - The common-mode voltage can actually be
controlled using a Driven right-leg circuit. - A small current (lt1?A) is injected into the
patient to equal the displacement currents
flowing in the body. - The body sums these currents and the common-mode
voltage is driven to a low value.
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38A Modification
- There is a better approach than setting the
system ground to the common-mode voltage. - The common-mode voltage can actually be
controlled using a Driven right-leg circuit. - A small current (lt1?A) is injected into the
patient to equal the displacement currents
flowing in the body. - The body sums these currents and the common-mode
voltage is driven to a low value. - Also improves patient safety.
39Diagnostic use of the ECG
- As has been seen, the ECG can provide diagnostic
information to clinicians. - Ectopic beats originate somewhere other than the
SA node and often have different shapes
(morphologies). - Abnormal heart rates (arrhythmias) can be treated.
40Diagnostic use of the ECG
- Post heart attack (Myocardial Infarct) the ECG is
highly informative. - Cardiac muscle damage (infarcts) generally
correspond to loss of amplitude. - Insufficient blood supply to cardiac cells
(Ischemic heart condition) changes the S-T level.
41Acquiring ECG for Diagnosis
- Two methods are in common use
- Exercise Stress ECGs
- Ambulatory monitoring
42Acquiring ECG for Diagnosis
- Two methods are in common use
- Exercise Stress ECGs
- Ambulatory monitoring
43Acquiring ECG for Diagnosis
- Ambulatory monitoring
- ECG monitored for 24 hours.
- Each beat analysed and either kept for records or
ignored (because too normal!) - Results printed out
- 1 page summary of conditions detected.
- 24-hour summary detailing the heart rate and ST
segment changes over the period of the test. - Findings pages with detailed information for each
finding or symptom event.
44Foetal Monitoring
- It can be helpful to clinicians and midwives to
have information about both the maternal and
foetal ECG during childbirth - Although this may add stress, the behaviour of
the foetal ECG (and heart rate) is known to give
information about potential foetal distress