
This paper introduces a new method of simultaneous acquisition of electrocardiogram (ECG) signals and electrical impedance tomography (EIT) measurements on active electrodes, i.e. electrodes that are applying current, in an EIT system.Howland noise reduction followed by an integrate-and-dump filter and adaptive filtering are used to extract the ECG signal without loss of amplitude.Results of simultaneous ECG signals and EIT reconstructions on human subjects are shown. It is also demonstrated that the recovered ECG waveforms from 32 electrodes can be used to reconstruct the heart current source vectors during a cardiac cycle, yielding an approximate solution to the inverse problem of electrocardiography.Acquiring ECG signals from all electrodes attached to the body simultaneously with EIT data acquisition eliminates the need for a separate system to collect ECG signals. Time-aligned ECG signals are helpful in interpreting pulsatile perfusion images by providing exact timing of each image in relation to the cardiac cycle. Additionally, collecting ECG signals from many or all of the EIT electrodes enables reconstruction of the heart's moving dipole moment at the same time as the EIT images.
Electrocardiography, Electric Impedance, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Humans, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Tomography, Electrodes, Algorithms
Electrocardiography, Electric Impedance, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Humans, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Tomography, Electrodes, Algorithms
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