A new floating sensor array to detect electric near fields of beating heart preparations |
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Authors: | Hofer E Keplinger F Thurner T Wiener T Sanchez-Quintana D Climent V Plank G |
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Affiliation: | aInstitute of Biophysics, Center for Physiological Medicine, Medical University of Graz, Graz, Austria bInstitute of Industrial Electronics and Material Science, University of Technology, Vienna, Austria cInstitute of Electrical Measurement and Measurement Signal Processing, University of Technology, Graz, Austria dDepartment of Human Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Extremadura, Badajoz, Spain |
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Abstract: | A new flexible sensor for in vitro experiments was developed to measure the surface potential, Φ, and its gradient, E (electric near field), at given sites of the heart. During depolarisation, E describes a vector loop from which direction and magnitude of local conduction velocity θ can be computed. Four recording silver electrodes (14 μm × 14 μm) separated by 50 μm, conducting leads, and solderable pads were patterned on a 50 μm thick polyimide film. The conductive structures, except the electrodes, were isolated with polyimide, and electrodes were chlorided. Spacer pillars mounted on the tip fulfil two functions: they keep the electrodes 70 μm from the tissue allowing non-contact recording of Φ and prevent lateral slipping. The low mass (9.1 mg) and flexibility (6.33 N/m) of the sensor let it easily follow the movement of the beating heart without notable displacement. We examined the electrodes on criteria like rms-noise of Φ, signal-to-noise ratio of Φ and E, maximum peak-slope recording dΦ/dt, and deviation of local activation time (LAT) from a common signal and obtained values of 24–28 μV, 46 and 41 dB, 497–561 V/s and no differences, respectively. With appropriate data acquisition (sampling rate 100 kHz, 24-bit), we were able to record Φ and to monitor E and θ on-line from beat-to-beat even at heart rates of 600 beats/min. Moreover, this technique can discriminate between uncoupled cardiac activations (as occur in fibrotic tissue) separated by less than 1 mm and 1 ms. |
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Keywords: | High-density electrode array Micro mapping Conduction velocity |
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