Title :
Real-Time Management of Faulty Electrodes in Electrical Impedance Tomography
Author :
Hartinger, Alzbeta E. ; Guardo, Robert ; Adler, Andy ; Gagnon, Hervé
Author_Institution :
Inst. de Genie Biomed., Ecole Polytech. de Montreal, Montreal, QC
Abstract :
Completely or partially disconnected electrodes are a fairly common occurrence in many electrical impedance tomography (EIT) clinical applications. Several factors can contribute to electrode disconnection: patient movement, perspiration, manipulations by clinical staff, and defective electrode leads or electronics. By corrupting several measurements, faulty electrodes introduce significant image artifacts. In order to properly manage faulty electrodes, it is necessary to: (1) account for invalid data in image reconstruction algorithms and (2) automatically detect faulty electrodes. This paper presents a two-part approach for real-time management of faulty electrodes based on the principle of voltage-current reciprocity. The first part allows accounting for faulty electrodes in EIT image reconstruction without a priori knowledge of which electrodes are at fault. The method properly weights each measurement according to its compliance with the principle of voltage-current reciprocity. Results show that the algorithm is able to automatically determine the valid portion of the data and use it to calculate high-quality images. The second part of the approach allows automatic real-time detection of at least one faulty electrode with 100% sensitivity and two faulty electrodes with 80% sensitivity enabling the clinical staff to fix the problem as soon as possible to minimize data loss.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biomedical electrodes; electric impedance imaging; image reconstruction; medical image processing; tomography; automatic real-time detection; data loss; defective electrode leads; electrical impedance tomography; electrode disconnection; faulty electrodes; image artifacts; image reconstruction algorithms; partially disconnected electrodes; patient movement; perspiration; real-time management; voltage-current reciprocity; Biomedical electrodes; Biomedical measurements; Conductivity; Current measurement; Fault detection; Image reconstruction; Postal services; Skin; Surface impedance; Tomography; Voltage; Weight measurement; Biomedical instrumentation; electrical impedance tomography (EIT); faulty electrodes; voltage--current reciprocity principle; Algorithms; Artifacts; Electric Impedance; Electrodes; Equipment Failure Analysis; Humans; Male; Sensitivity and Specificity; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Tomography; Young Adult;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2008.2003103