학술논문

A simple method of enhancing tolerance and efficacy during noninvasive transcutaneous cardiac pacing
Document Type
Conference
Source
1992 14th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 1992 14th Annual International Conference of the IEEE. 4:1616-1618 Oct, 1992
Subject
Bioengineering
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Signal Processing and Analysis
Robotics and Control Systems
Electrodes
Biomedical monitoring
Monitoring
Cardiology
Language
Abstract
Tolerance of noninvasive transcutaneous cardiac pacing depends on minimizing the stimulation threshold, expressed as current density. Achieving a uniform current density has been the chief aim of serveral investigations because this reduces skeletal muscle contraction and painful skin receptor stimulation. In beagle dogs, we used two pregelled electrode models (metal-disk or carbon-fiber ∗ ) of various area (75, 31, 8 and 7 ∗ cm2) to measure experimentally the pacing threshold required to capture the heart, and to measure impedance in a static system comprising electrodes arranged opposite each other, using the same pacing parameters (20 to 60 mA and 65 ipm). The heart rate was about 65 ipm with negative polarity in the sub-apical region and with constant topographical geometry and position of the successsively placed electrodes, maintaining the animal in the same position. The tolerance score and pacing threshold were lowest with three carbon fiber electrodes (surface area : 21 cm2). In our dogs, gel impedance seemed to be of smaller importance than the distribution of current density which was more accurately expressed as perimeter current density.