A critique of impedance measurements in cardiac tissue.
The specific impedance of cardiac tissue cannot be measured directly. Instead, the investigator obtains voltage and current measurements and places them into a model of the tissue's structure to infer the impedances of elements of the model. If the model fails to describe major aspects of the real tissue, the results may be worthless, although possibly self-consistent. In the literature of impedance measurement in cardiac tissue, only rarely is the model explicitly described; more commonly, the tissue model is adopted implicitly when equations giving the impedance in terms of voltage and current measurements are adopted. This paper examines the series of models that have been used in specific impedance measurements of cardiac tissue and shows how the same or similar measurements can accurately describe tissue impedivity or can lead to significant errors when inadequate models such as isotropic and anisotropic monodomains (although a part of work of historical merit) are used.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Models, Cardiovascular
- Heart
- Electrophysiology
- Electrodes
- Electric Conductivity
- Biomedical Engineering
- Biomedical Engineering
- Animals
- 4003 Biomedical engineering
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Models, Cardiovascular
- Heart
- Electrophysiology
- Electrodes
- Electric Conductivity
- Biomedical Engineering
- Biomedical Engineering
- Animals
- 4003 Biomedical engineering
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences