Uniti 211115041435

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Introduction:

Characterization of
Biomedical
Signals

Biomedical Signal Processing


Cellular
Level Tissue
Chemical Level
Level

Organ
Level
System
Organizational

Level
Level
Nature of
Biomedical Signals
 Living organisms are made of many systems – e.g. human body:
Nervous, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, endocrine, respiratory, etc.

Each system is made of subsystems (organs, tissues, etc.) that are responsible for certain
physiological processes

Cardiovascular system pumps blood to deliver nutrients to the body

 Each physiological process is associated with certain types of signals that


reflect their nature and activities

Such signals can be of different types:


Biochemical --------hormones, neurotransmitters
Electrical ------------potentials, currents
Mechanical---------- pressure, temperature

 Any deviation of these signals from their normal parameters typically


represents a disease / disorders --------- pathological condition
Observing these signals and comparing them to their known norms, we can
often detect these pathological conditions
Some Commonly
Used Biomedical Signals
The action potential – mother of all biological signals

 The electroneurogram (ENG) – propagation of nerve action potential

 The electromyogram (EMG) – electrical activity of the muscle cells

 The electrocardiogram (ECG) – electrical activity of the heart / cardiac cells

 The electroencephalogram (EEG) – electrical activity of the brain

 The electrogastogram (EGG) – electrical activity of the stomach

 The phonocardiogram (PCG) – audio recording of the heart’s mechanical activity

 The electoretinogram (ERG) – electrical activity of the retinal cells

 The electrooculogram (EOG) – electrical activity of the eye muscles


The Action Potential
The action potential is the origin of all biopotentials

 All biological signals of electrical origin are made up from integration of many
action potentials

The AP is the electrical signal that is generated by a single cell when it is


mechanically, electrically or chemically stimulated

 It is the primary mechanism through which electrical signals propagate between


cells, tissues and organs.

 It is due in part, to an electrochemical imbalance across the cell membrane, and in


part, due to selective permeability of the membrane to certain ions

• At resting state, the cell membrane is permeable to K+ and Cl-, but not to Na+
• Lots of Na+ trapped outside make the intracellular region electrically more negative,
with a resting membrane potential of -60 ~-80 mV
• When the cell is disturbed, ion channels across the membrane open up and allow an
influx of Na+ : depolarization  inside of the cell becomes more positive: +20mV
• However, the channels close soon after, forcing the membrane potential back to its
resting stage: repolarization
• The change in membrane potential is the AP, which itself then stimulates the
neighboring cell, and starts the transmission of the APs
Computer aided diagnosis
Objective of biomedical signal
analysis
• Information gathering - measurement of phenomena to interpret a system.

• Diagnosis - detection of malfunction, pathology, or abnormality.

• Monitoring - obtaining continuous or periodic information about a system.

• Therapy and control - modification of the behavior of a system based upon


• the outcome of the activities listed above to ensure a specific result.

• Evaluation - objective analysis to determine the ability to meet functional


requirements, obtain proof of performance, perform quality control, or quantify
the effect of treatment.
Thank you
The Electromyogram -EMG
 The EMG is the graphic
representation of the
electrical activity of the
skeletal muscles – either
during resting stage, or in
response to stimulation
 Unlike AP which is
measured on the cellular
level, the EMG is a
surface signal
 obtained through surface
and/or needle electrodes
• Measures the electric activity of active muscle fibers
• Electrodes are always connected very close to the muscle
group being measured
• Rectified and integrated EMG signal gives rough indication
of the muscle activity
• Needle electrodes can be used to measure individual muscle fibers

• Amplitude: 1-10 mV
• Bandwidth: 20-3000 Hz

• Main sources of errors are 50/60 Hz and RF interference

• Applications: muscle function, neuromuscular disease, prosthesis


EMG SIGNAL
The Electrocardiogram - ECG
 ECG is the graphical recording of the
electrical activity of the heart

ECG can be obtained easily using


surface electrodes.

 As with other electrical signals of


biological origin, it is the combination
of many

 APs from different regions of


the heart that makes up the ECG
 Its characteristic shape is
widely recognized.

 Any abnormality in the cardiovascular


dynamics manifests itself as an
arrhythmia in the ECG
2. Ventricular 3. Ventricular repolarization
depolarization

1. Atrial
depolarization
Electrocardiogram - ECG
ECG
• Amplitude: 1-5 mV
• Bandwidth: 0.05-100 Hz

• Largest measurement error sources:


– Motion artifacts
– 50/60 Hz powerline interference

• Typical applications:
– Diagnosis of ischemia
– Arrhythmia
– Conduction defects
The Electroencephalogram
EEG
• Measures the brain’s electric activity from the scalp

• Measured signal results from the activity of billions of neurons

• Amplitude:0.001-0.01 Mv

• Bandwidth:0.5-40 Hz

• Errors:
– Thermal RF noise
– 50/60 Hz power lines
– Blink artifacts and similar

• Typical applications:
– Sleep studies
– Seizure detection
– Cortical mapping
EEG: Electrode Recording
System
• EEG recording is
done using a
standard lead
system called 10-
20 system
10-20 International
Electrode Placement
The Electrooculogram
EOG
 The EOG measures
the resting potential of
the retina. Unlike
ERG it is not recorded
in response to a
stimulus.

The EOG is often


used in recording the
eye-movements
Electrooculography (EOG)
• Electric potentials are created as a result of the
movement of the eyeballs
• Potential varies in proportion to the amplitude of
the movement
• In many ways a challenging measurement with
some clinical value

• Amplitude: 0.01-0.1 mV
• Bandwidth: DC-10 Hz
• Primary sources of error include skin
potential and motion

• Applications: eye position, sleep state,


vestibulo-ocular reflex
EOG RECORDING
Horizontal recording Vertical recording
The Event Related
Potentials - ERPs
 ERPs are really EEGs obtained under a specific
protocol that requires the patient to response to
certain stimuli – hence event related potentials.

 Also called evoked potentials these signals can


be used to diagnose certain neurological
disorders.

 they can also be used as a lie detector


Electroretinogram
ERG
 The ERG is the record of the
retinal action currents
produced by the retina in
response to a light stimulus.
It measures the electrical
responses of the light-sensitive
cells (such as rods and
cones).
 The stimuli are often a series
of light flashes or rotating
patterns
The ERG is recorded using
contact lens electrode that the
subject wears while watching
the stimuli.
ARTIFACT (Interference)
Baseline drift due to the
changes in junction
potential or motion artifacts
Choice of electrodes

Muscle signal
interference
 Placement

Electromagnetic
interference
 Shielding
PHYSIOLOGICAL INTERFERENCE

ECG with EMG interference

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