This application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 of German Patent Application DE 10 2005 031 751.0 filed Jul. 7, 2005, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention pertains to an electroimpedance tomograph with a plurality of electrodes, which can be arranged on the body of a patient and which are connected via a selector switch to a control and evaluating unit, wherein the control and evaluating unit cooperates with the selector switch such that two electrodes each are supplied with alternating current from an AC power source and the detected analog voltage signals of the other electrodes are sent into the control and evaluating unit via a measuring amplifier and are processed there in order to reconstruct from this the impedance distribution of the body in the plane of the electrodes, a symmetrical AC power source being used to reduce common-mode signals.
A measuring technical problem in electroimpedance tomography is that the useful signal used to calculate the graphic representation must be sufficiently larger than the particular interferences. The simple increase in the measuring current has limits, because the currents that are permissible according to the standards are limited (in a frequency-dependent manner). Consequently, it is necessary to reduce the interference signals. Moreover, the interference signals consist partly of self-generated interferences, e.g., the crosstalk or the so-called common-mode signal, which increase proportionally to the increase in the current. Increasing the measuring current can improve the distance from the external interferences at best.
Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a method for reconstituting impedance distributions or, in case of functional EIT for reconstituting impedance changes relative to a reference distribution, in electrically conductive bodies. A plurality of electrodes are arranged for this purpose on the conductive surface of the body being examined, and the control unit, usually a digital signal processor, ensures that a pair of (preferably) adjacent electrodes each is supplied consecutively with an electric alternating current (for example, 5 mA at 50 kHz), and the electric voltages are detected at the remaining electrodes acting as measuring electrodes and are sent to the control unit. The impedance distribution or, in case of functional electroimpedance tomography, the change in that impedance distribution relative to a reference distribution can be reconstructed with suitable algorithms by the combination of the measured voltage values during the consecutive rotating current feeds. A ring-shaped, equidistant array of 16 electrodes is used in typical cases, and these electrodes can be placed around the body of a patient, for example, with a belt. Alternating current is fed into two adjacent electrodes each, and the voltages are measured between the remaining currentless electrode pairs acting as measuring electrodes and recorded by the control unit. By rotating the current feed points, a plurality of measured voltage values are obtained, from which a two-dimensional tomogram of the impedance distribution can be reconstructed relative to a reference in the plane of the electrode.
Such tomograms are of interest in medicine because the impedances depend on the biological state of the organs (for example, the breathing state of the lungs) and/or the frequency of the current. Therefore, both measurements at different states are performed at a given feed frequency and in different biological states (for example, observation of the breathing cycles) and measurements at different frequencies performed at different feed frequencies and identical biological state in order to obtain information on the corresponding impedance changes. As was already mentioned, functional impedance tomography of the lungs, in which the electrodes of the EIT device are arranged around the patient's thorax, is an important application. One of the interferences occurring in terms of measuring technique during impedance tomography is the ultimately unavoidably occurring residual asymmetry of the alternating current feed on the body, which also occurs when a symmetrical AC power source is used, which is due to the differences in the routing of the cables to the different electrodes, different contact resistances, etc.
The power source supplies an alternating current alternating between 20 kHz and several MHZ for the measurement. To evaluate the causes of the development of the asymmetry of current feed, it is consequently necessary to use not only disturbing differences in the ohmic resistors but also those in the AC impedances. The use of alternating current is necessary for medical reasons. The permissible measuring currents would be even lower by several orders of magnitude in case of direct current. Moreover, the measurement with alternating current makes possible a low-drift, frequency-selective demodulation of the measuring currents and to obtain information on how the impedances of the upper body change with the frequency.
Finally, the transition impedances of the electrodes against the skin surface are finite and different, which is likewise to be taken into account. Moreover, they are complex, i.e., they are composed mainly of the transition resistances REL and RER and the transition capacitances CEL and CER.
All asymmetries combined produce the result that there are different flows of measuring currents from the two lines via the stray capacitances against the ground and different voltage drops at the longitudinal impedances and consequently there are differences in current flow between the two feed terminals, because more or less different current components will have now flown to the ground before and the differential current flows to the ground via the body resistance and the transition impedance of the reference ground electrode and thus it generates a common-mode signal on the body and consequently on the measuring electrodes. This common-mode signal is different for all actuated electrode positions both because of the differences in the channels of the multiplexer 60 as well as the external lines and of the electrode transition resistances and generates at the measuring amplifier error signals, which may overlap the useful signals, together with the value and the differences of the transition impedances of the particular measuring electrodes (which are connected by the multiplexer 60) with the finite common-mode reduction resulting therefrom.
Even if the measuring amplifier behind the multiplexer were ideal, the electrodes of the particular connected measuring lines would again generate asymmetries and only a finite common-mode signal suppression in a manner that is the reverse of what happens in case of the current path via the parasitic impedances and the values thereof, which differ from one measuring channel to the next.
One possibility of keeping this common-mode signal as low as possible is a reference ground electrode with a very low transition impedance. The size of the possible reference ground electrodes and their ability to be handled are limited and, beginning from a certain size, they generate movement artifacts, which originate from the changes in the transition impedance that are generated during the movement of the patient. Therefore, this measure has only limited effectiveness.
The object of the present invention is therefore to provide an electroimpedance tomograph in which interferences with the measured signals due to common-mode signals are further suppressed.
According to the invention, an electroimpedance tomograph is provided with a plurality of electrodes, which can be placed on the body of a patient and are connected to a control and evaluating unit via a selector switch. The control and evaluating unit cooperates with the selector switch such that two electrodes are each supplied with an alternating current from an AC power source and the detected analog voltage signals of the other electrodes are sent into the control and evaluating unit via a measuring amplifier and a AD converter and are processed there in order to reconstruct therefrom the impedance distribution of the body in the plane of the electrodes. A symmetrical AC power source is used to reduce common-mode signals. The control and evaluating unit is set up to make available an additional common-mode signal at an output during an adjusting mode of operation and to send the additional common-mode signal to the body via common-mode signal electrodes that can be placed on the body. The control and evaluating unit is set up, furthermore, to adjust the measuring amplifier according to value and phase for each electrode pair connected by the selector switch such that the common-mode signal at the output of the measuring amplifier is minimized. Adjusted parameters are stored for each electrode pair. The control and evaluating unit is furthermore set up to poll the corresponding adjusted parameters during the measuring mode for each connected electrode pair and to adjust the measuring amplifier according to these parameters.
Consequently, this device is able to purposefully apply an additional common-mode signal to the body via common-mode signal electrodes. This common-mode signal, applied in a purposeful manner, propagates into the measuring amplifier for each electrode pair that is switched through. The control and evaluating unit is thus set up, e.g., by programming and adjusting circuits, which are controllable as a result, at the measuring amplifier to adjust the measuring amplifier such that the common-mode signal, which is applied to the body and which also appears in the measuring amplifier via the particular electrode pair and the selector switch, is minimized at the output of the measuring amplifier. After this adjustment, the measuring amplifier can also be adjusted during an EIT measurement with the adjusted parameters stored for each electrode pair, and it will output, as a result, common-mode signals appearing during the measurement only minimally at its output.
The additional common-mode signal is preferably applied by means of an analog control loop circuit. The analog control loop circuit has a differential amplifier, one input of which is connected to the output of a common-mode signal electrode that can be placed on the patient's body and whose other input is connected to the output for the common-mode signal generated additionally. The output of the differential amplifier is connected to a common-mode signal electrode, which can be placed on the body. The control and evaluating unit is set up to ground the output for the additional common-mode signal in the measuring mode. As a result, a control circuit with active grounded electrode (the common-mode signal electrode connected to the output of the differential amplifier) is embodied in the measuring mode.
It is preferred if the control and evaluating unit is set up for making available the additional common-mode signal with the same frequency as that of the symmetrical AC power source, so that the common-mode signal generated additionally for the purposes of adjusting has the same frequency as common-mode signals appearing during the measuring mode.
The adjustment of the measuring amplifier can be made possible, e.g., by one branch of the measuring amplifier being connected, on the one hand, to the ground via an ohmic resistor and a transistor and, on the other hand, to the group via a capacitor and a transistor. The control and evaluating unit drives the transistors via a digital-analog converter in order to control the coupling of the ohmic resistor and of the capacitor, in order to achieve suppression of the common-mode signal according to value and phase as a result.
The present invention will be described below on the basis of exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings. The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages and specific objects attained by its uses, reference is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.
In the drawings:
Referring to the drawings in particular, the electroimpedance tomograph shown in
In the EIT device shown in
The control and evaluating unit 20 is set up, furthermore, to adjust the measuring amplifier 62, so that the common-mode signal at its output is minimized. Provisions are made for this purpose in the exemplary embodiment according to
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the application of the principles of the invention, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 031 751.0 | Jul 2005 | DE | national |