AD5933-based electrical bioimpedance spectrometer. Towards textile-enabled applications

Advances on System-On-Chip and Textile technology allows the development of Textile-enabled measurement instrumentation. Textile Electrodes (Textrodes) have been proven reliable for performing Electrical Bioimpedance Spectroscopy (EBIS) measurements, and the availability of a integrated circuit impedance spectrometer, the AD5933, has allowed the implementation of small size EBIS spectrometers. In this work an AD5933-based spectrometer has been implemented, and its performance on 2R1C circuits and for tetrapolar total right side EBIS measurements has been compared against the commercially available spectrometer SFB7. The study has been focused on the working upper frequency range and the estimation of the Cole parameters required for assessment of body fluid distribution: R0 and R∞. The results indicate that AD5933-based spectrometer implemented in this work can perform accurate impedance measurements well above the upper limits recommended in the datasheet. The AD5933-EBIS presents a good performance compared with the SFB7 on the 2R1C circuit and the total right side measurements, showing a smaller error in the resistance spectrum and small deviation error in the reactance when measuring over 270 kHz. The comparison on the Cole parameters estimation obtained with the SFB7 and the AD5933-based spectrometer exhibit a difference below 1% for the estimation of R0 and R∞. Consequently the overall measurement performance shown by the implemented AD5933-based spectrometer suggests its feasible use for EBIS measurements using dry Textrodes. This is of special relevance for the proliferation of EBI-based personalized health monitoring systems for patients that require to monitor the distribution of body fluids, like in dialysis.

[1]  Jens Muehlsteff,et al.  The Role of Technology for Non-Invasive Cardiovascular Monitoring in the Future Exemplified , 2009 .

[2]  P. Bogonez-Franco,et al.  Performance of an implantable impedance spectroscopy monitor using ZigBee , 2010 .

[3]  N. Levin,et al.  Application of bioimpedance techniques to peritoneal dialysis. , 2006, Contributions to nephrology.

[4]  J. C. Marquez,et al.  Textile electrode straps for wrist-to-ankle bioimpedance measurements for Body Composition Analysis. Initial validation & experimental results , 2010, 2010 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology.

[5]  Fernando Seoane,et al.  Comparison of dry-textile electrodes for electrical bioimpedance spectroscopy measurements , 2010 .

[6]  M. Elia,et al.  Bioelectrical impedance analysis-part II: utilization in clinical practice. , 2004, Clinical nutrition.

[7]  Fernando Seoane,et al.  An analog front-end enables electrical impedance spectroscopy system on-chip for biomedical applications , 2008, Physiological measurement.

[8]  Fernando Seoane,et al.  AD5933-based Spectrometer for Electrical Bioimpedance Applications , 2010 .

[9]  J. C. Marquez,et al.  Textrode functional straps for bioimpedance measurements-experimental results for body composition analysis , 2013, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[10]  Hélène Morel,et al.  Body fluid volumes measurements by impedance: A review of bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) and bioimpedance analysis (BIA) methods. , 2008, Medical engineering & physics.

[11]  Fernando Seoane,et al.  Cole equation and parameter estimation from electrical bioimpedance spectroscopy measurements - A comparative study , 2009, 2009 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.