• DocumentCode
    43051
  • Title

    Electrodes for Long-Term Esophageal Electrocardiography

  • Author

    Niederhauser, Thomas ; Haeberlin, Andreas ; Marisa, Thanks ; Jungo, Michael ; Goette, Josef ; Jacomet, Marcel ; Abacherli, Roger ; Vogel, Rolf

  • Author_Institution
    ARTORG Cardiovascular Eng., Univ. of Bern, Bern, Switzerland
  • Volume
    60
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Sept. 2013
  • Firstpage
    2576
  • Lastpage
    2584
  • Abstract
    The emerging application of long-term and high-quality ECG recording requires alternative electrodes to improve the signal quality and recording capability of surface skin electrodes. The esophageal ECG has the potential to overcome these limitations but necessitates novel recorder and lead designs. The electrode material is of particular interest, since the material has to ensure conflicting requirements like excellent biopotential recording properties and inertness. To this end, novel electrode materials like PEDOT and silver-PDMS as well as established electrode materials such as stainless steel, platinum, gold, iridium oxide, titanium nitride, and glassy carbon were investigated by long-term electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and model-based signal analysis using the derived in vitro interfacial properties in conjunction with a dedicated ECG amplifier. The results of this novel approach show that titanium nitride and iridium oxide featuring microstructured surfaces did not degrade when exposed to artificial acidic saliva. These materials provide low electrode potential drifts and insignificant signal distortion superior to surface skin electrodes making them compatible with accepted standards for ambulatory ECG. They are superior to the noble and polarizable metals such as platinum, silver, and gold that induced more signal distortions and are superior to esophageal stainless steel electrodes that corrode in artificial saliva. The study provides rigorous criteria for the selection of electrode materials for prolonged ECG recording by combining long-term in vitro electrode material properties with ECG signal quality assessment.
  • Keywords
    amplifiers; biological organs; biomedical electrodes; carbon; electrocardiography; electrochemical electrodes; electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; gold; iridium compounds; platinum; silver; skin; stainless steel; titanium compounds; Au; C; ECG recording; ECG signal quality assessment; IrOx; PEDOT; Pt; TiN; artificial saliva; biopotential recording properties; dedicated ECG amplifier; esophageal stainless steel electrodes; glassy carbon; gold; in vitro interfacial properties; iridium oxide; long-term electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; long-term esophageal electrocardiography; model-based signal analysis; platinum; polarizable metals; signal distortion; silver-PDMS; surface skin electrodes; titanium nitride; Electric potential; Electrocardiography; Electrodes; Gold; Impedance; Materials; Surface impedance; Corrosion resistance; electrode material; electrode potential stability; esophageal ECG (eECG); long-term and high-quality ECG; signal distortion; Corrosion; Electrocardiography; Electrodes; Iridium; Materials Testing; Platinum; Stainless Steel;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBME.2013.2261067
  • Filename
    6511975