This application is a national phase application of PCT Application Serial NumberPCT/EE2003/000006 filed Nov. 28, 2003, which, in turn, claims priority to Estonian Application No. P200200677, filed Dec. 6, 2002. Each of these applications is herein incorporated in its entirety by reference.
The invention is related to the measurement of electrical impedance, particularly to measurement of the electrical bio-impedance, and is based on the synchronous signal conversion or lock-in techniques used for converting of measuring signals for forming the measuring (excitation) signal as well as for demodulating the response signal from the object.
The main field of application of the invention is related to the measurement of impedance in portable and/or implantable medical means and apparatuses, which are used with the aim to get diagnostic results and to determine the conditions of implanted and/or implantable and transplantable organs and tissues. The invention is directly aimed to be used in implantable medical devices, such as rate-adaptive cardiac pacemakers and monitors, and in monitors of transplantable and transplanted organs.
The PCT application WO 01/19426 “Implantable Device and Method for Long-Term Detection and Monitoring of Congestive Heart Failure” has been described a measuring device, which is mounted into the pacemaker, and observes over the complications appearing in the cardiac blood vessel system and in the blood circulation in lungs. The method is based on directing various types of current/voltage excitation signals (rectangular waveform signal, sine wave signal, pulse signal, signal with varying frequency) through the bio-object and measuring the inphase and quadrature components of the electrical response to the excitation. The device measures the variations in the impedance of the cardiac blood vessel system and of the blood circulation in lungs via measuring the current flow through the object, the voltage drop forming on it and the phase shift between the excitation and response signals.
In the inventions WO 00/57953 and WO 00/57954 “A Rate Adaptive pacemaker” the device for bio-impedance measurement is used for obtaining information for adaptive control of cardiac pacing rate taking into account the energetic balance of the myocardium.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,759,159 “Method and Apparatus for Apical Detection with Complex Impedance Measurement” (Jun. 2, 1998) describes the bio-impedance measurement device used for finding the apex of a dental channel. The apex can be found by measuring the amplitude and phase characteristics of the bio-impedance between the probe and biological tissue. The method is based on measuring the amplitude and phase relationships of an electrical impedance in response to a multi-frequency excitation using a digital fast Fourier transformation (FFT).
The above described devices are not suitable for implantation because their electronic circuitry is too complicated and energy consuming.
Nowadays low voltage and low power CMOS microelectronics technology is suitable for application in switching mode analogue and digital mixed signal circuits. The extremely low power consumption is crucially important for the implantable devices operating during several years with the same battery.
Unfortunately, application of the switching mode electronics operating with pulse signals results in misleading measurement errors and measurement uncertainties due to the higher harmonics present in the pulse signals. Theoretically, application of pure sine wave signals without any higher harmonics is presumed for determination of the complex impedance. Therefore, application of the simplest rectangular waveform pulses being the most suitable for use in CMOS electronics, introduces serious measurement errors [M. Min, and T. Parve, “Improvement of the vector analyser based on two-phase switching mode synchronous detection”, Measurement, Vol. 19 (1996), No. 2, pp. 103-111].
To overcome the problem, usually the band-pass filters are introduced in order to filter out the fundamental and to suppress the higher harmonics. This solution helps to solve the higher harmonics problem only partly, because the highly selective band-pass filters have very unstable phase characteristics. The exact tuning of such filters is also rather complicated.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,063,937, A61B 5/05, “Multiple frequency bio-impedance measurement system”, B. N. Ezenwa, W. P. Couch, Nov. 12, 1991, describes the closest reference. In this document there is described a solution for a device for noninvasive measurement of the bio-impedance of a living tissue, according to which the component of interest of the excitation response of the bio-impedance (its active or reactive part) is demodulated by a synchronous detector, the reference signal of which is a rectangular wave signal being in phase or in quadrature with the excitation signal.
The systems operation is based on the switch-mode generator generating rectangular pulses, but prior to being applied to the test objects input the excitation pulses pass the highly selective band-pass filter. The band-pass filter is tuned to the main frequency of the excitation signal, and therefore the filter suppresses the higher harmonics of the original rectangular pulses, reducing in such a way the content of higher harmonics in the signals to be detected by the synchronous detector and decreasing measurement errors, which are caused by higher harmonics.
The described above solution has the following main drawbacks.
Tuning of a highly selective band-bass filter to the fundamental frequency is a troublesome procedure with an instable result. The phase shift between input and output can be compensated using sophisticated electronic circuits, which makes the excitation generator excessively complicated and bulky.
Some problems arise also in connection with generating of the reference signals used for driving the synchronous detector. In practice the rectangular reference pulse signals have to be formed anew from the filtered out pure sine wave excitation signal in order to eliminate the phase errors caused by the highly selective filter. Thus, some additional electronic circuits are needed, but the complexity of a circuitry is extremely undesirable in implantable medical devices in connection with which the compactness and low current consumption is required.
In addition, the described solution is not suitable for implementing in modern CMOS technology because several electronic blocks operate in near to linear mode.
The purpose of the invention is to increase the accuracy of measurements of the electrical impedance and/or immittance, using the switch-mode generation and demodulation of signals in the case of both analogue and digital signal processing, retaining at the same time the characteristic simplicity of the measurement method, as well as the simplicity and low energy consumption of the measuring device. The undesirable effects caused by both the higher odd harmonics contained in the rectangular wave signals and by the sensitivity of traditional synchronous detectors to odd higher harmonics are essentially suppressed, minimized, or in some embodiments, eliminated.
In traditional applications of synchronous detectors the strongest impact to the demodulated signal is caused by the closest to the main frequency odd higher harmonics within the first decade, i.e. the 3rd, 5th, 7th, and 9th harmonics, having typically the highest levels as well. For example, the measurement error caused only by the 3rd harmonic of the rectangular signal having the level of ⅓ of the fundamental, can cause a relative measurement error of 1/9 or 11 percent. The resulting measurement error from all higher harmonics of the rectangular waveform can extend up to 24 percent.
In addition to the amplitude errors also the phase errors appear from application of the non sine wave signals. Though the phase errors remain relatively smaller than the amplitude errors, their role can be significant anyway, because the absolute value of the phase shift as a rule does not exceed 45 degrees at the bio-impedance measurements. Therefore, the phase error of only some degrees results in a relative error in the range of 10 percent.
A feature of one measurement method according to the invention lies in reducing of the harmonics content of periodic and symmetrically bipolar pulse wave signals through shortening the duration of their constant value sections by a predetermined time intervals, during which the signals can have different values, including the zero value (
The zero value intervals in
where:
a is the constant amplitude value of the pulse signal, and
b characterises the relative shortening of pulses and is equal to the length of the signal's zero value interval within one half period, and can have values in the range of b=0 . . . π/2
all these terms of the sum, for which the argument (2n+1)b of the cosine function is an odd number multiple of π/2, that is
are missing.
Whereas the lower order higher harmonics cause the most significant errors of synchronous demodulation, then the values for the zero value intervals b can be found from the following simple conditions:
to remove the 3rd harmonic, 3b=π/2,b=π/6 or 30°,
to remove the 5th harmonic, 5b=π/2,b=π/10 or 18°.
Applying of the above given conditions shows that the first coinciding harmonics in the excitation and reference signals are the 7th ones, which means that the measurement error is reduced about one order in comparison with the initial case of using regular rectangular waveforms (the amplitude error between −13 to +24 percent is reduced to −1.8 to +2.4 percent). Such a result meets the needs of most cases to be faced in practice.
A device for implementing of the above method for increasing the accuracy of bio-impedance measurements contains additional functional blocks, the task of which is to shorten the duration of the constant value sections of both the excitation and the reference pulse signals by predetermined time intervals proportional to the signals periods, whereby these predetermined time intervals for the excitation signal and the reference signal have different duration.
Multiplication of pulse-form signals causes misleading measurement errors and uncertainty of results because of their higher harmonics content. Therefore, a former of shortened pulse 220 (
For example, if the zero value interval introduced into the excitation signal has a duration equal to b=π/10 or 18°, then the excitation signal does not contain harmonics of the 5th, 15th, 25th, . . . order, and if the zero value interval introduced into the reference signal is b=π/6 or 30°, then the reference signal do not contain harmonics of the 3rd, 9th, 15th, . . . order, and accordingly in the spectra of these signals the first coinciding harmonics having non-zero value are the 7th harmonics (
In comparison with the known solutions based on using of rectangular signals the proposed method has an error level, which is approximately one decimal order smaller at the output 203 of the synchronous detector 200 (maximum measurement error is reduced from 24% to 2.5%), which is an error level acceptable for most practical measurements in the respective field.
A device for measuring of an electrical bio-impedance in
The measurement channel 2 contains of the synchronous detector 200 and the device for generating shortened pulse 220, the output 223 of which is connected to the input 202 of the synchronous detector 200, and the second input 222 of which is connected to the second, auxiliary signal output 333 of the generator of quadrature signals 300. The input 201 of the synchronous detector 200 is connected to the output 12 of the bio-object 1, and the output 203 of the synchronous detector 200 is accordingly also the first output of the device.
The measurement channel 2′ includes the synchronous detector 200′ and the device for generating shortened pulse 220′, the output 223′ of which is connected to the input 202′ of the synchronous detector 200′, and the second input 222′ of which is connected to the auxiliary signal output 334 of the generator of quadrature signals 300. Input 201′ of the synchronous detector 200′ is connected to the output 12 of the bio-object 1, and the output 203′ of the synchronous detector 200′ is accordingly also the second output of the device.
The second input 222′ of the device for generating shortened pulse 220″ and applying the excitation signal to the bio-object 1 is connected to the assisting auxiliary signal output 332 of the generator of quadrature signals 300, and the output 223″ is connected to the input 11 of the bio-object 1.
The generator 300 of quadrature signals (
Former 320 of the bipolar rectangular signal (
The device for generating of shortened pulse 220 (
If need be, the synchronous detector 200 can be designed either on the basis of an analog multiplier 204 (
The measuring device with two measurement channels (
Symmetrical rectangular signals of fundamental frequency (
The measuring channel includes a synchronous detector, which can, according to the needs, be implemented on the basis of an analog multiplier (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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200200677 | Dec 2002 | EE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EE03/00006 | 11/28/2003 | WO | 00 | 6/6/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/052198 | 6/24/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5063937 | Ezenwa et al. | Nov 1991 | A |
5759159 | Masreliez | Jun 1998 | A |
6320370 | Weggel | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6377845 | Kinast | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6473640 | Erlebacher | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6885892 | Min et al. | Apr 2005 | B1 |
6975903 | Min et al. | Dec 2005 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
WO 0057953 | Oct 2000 | WO |
WO 0057954 | Oct 2000 | WO |
WO 0119426 | Mar 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060100539 A1 | May 2006 | US |