BackgroundLaser bio-stimulation is a well-established procedure in Medical Acupuncture. Nevertheless there is still a confusion as to whether it works or the effect is just placebo. Although a plethora of scientific papers published, showing positive clinical results, there is still a lack of objective scientific proofs about the bio-stimulation effect of lasers used in Acupuncture. The objective of this work was to design and build a body surface electrode and an amplifier for biopotential recording from acupuncture points, considered here as small localized bio-sources (SLB). The design is aimed for studying SLB potentials provoked by laser stimulus, in search for objective proofs of the bio-stimulation effect of lasers used in Medical Acupuncture.MethodsThe active electrode presented features a new adjustable anchoring system and fractionation of the biopotential amplifier between the electrode and the cabinet's location. The new adjustable electrode anchoring system is designed to reduce the electrode-skin contact impedance, its variation and motion artifacts. That is achieved by increasing the electrode-skin tension and decreasing its relative movement. Additionally the sensing element provides local constant skin stretching thus eliminating the contribution of the skin potential artifact. The electrode is attached to the skin by a double-sided adhesive pad, where the sensing element is a stainless steel, 4 mm in diameter. The fractionation of the biopotential amplifier is done by incorporating the amplifier's front-end op-amps at the electrodes, thus avoiding the use of extra buffers. The biopotential amplifier features two selectable modes of operation: semi-AC-mode with a -3 dB bandwidth of 0.32–1000 Hz and AC-mode with a bandwidth of 0.16–1000 Hz.ResultsThe average measured DC electrode-skin contact impedance of the proposed electrode was 450 kΩ, with electrode tension of 0.3 kg/cm2 on an unprepared skin of the inner forearm. The peak-to-peak noise voltage measured at the amplifier output, with input terminals connected to common, was 10 mVp-p, or 2 μVp-p referred to the input. The common-mode rejection ratio of the amplifier was 96 dB at 50 Hz, measured with imbalanced electrodes' impedances. The prototype was also tested practically and sample records were obtained after a low intensity SLB laser stimulation. All measurements showed almost a complete absence of 50 Hz interference, although no electrolyte gel or skin preparation was applied.ConclusionThe results showed that the new active electrode presented significantly reduced the electrode-skin impedance, its variation and motion artifact influences. This allowed SLB signals with relatively high quality to be recorded without skin preparation. The design offers low noise and major reduction in parts, size and power consumption. The active electrode specifications were found to be better or at least comparable to those of other existing designs.
[1]
Andrew A. Marino,et al.
Electrical Correlates of Acupuncture Points
,
1975,
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.
[2]
G. Litscher.
Cerebral and peripheral effects of laserneedle®-stimulation
,
2003,
Neurological research.
[3]
Andrew A. Marino,et al.
Laplace Plane Analysis of Transient Impedance Between Acupuncture Points Li-4 and Li-12
,
1977,
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.
[4]
P. C. Richardson,et al.
Some new electrode techniques for long-term physiologic monitoring.
,
1968,
Aerospace medicine.
[5]
John G. Webster,et al.
Medical Instrumentation: Application and Design
,
1997
.
[6]
J.H. Cho,et al.
Frequency dependence of impedances at the acupuncture point Quze (PC3)
,
2002,
IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine.
[7]
J. Rosell,et al.
Skin impedance from 1 Hz to 1 MHz
,
1988,
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.
[8]
A. C. MettingVanRijn,et al.
DC rejection and deblocking in multichannel bioelectric recordings
,
1995,
Proceedings of 17th International Conference of the Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.
[9]
G. Litscher.
Effects of acupressure, manual acupuncture and Laserneedle® acupuncture on EEG bispectral index and spectral edge frequency in healthy volunteers
,
2004,
European journal of anaesthesiology.
[10]
L. Geddes.
Electrodes and the measurement of bioelectric events
,
1972
.
[11]
C. A. Grimbergen,et al.
Amplifiers for bioelectric events: A design with a minimal number of parts
,
1994,
Medical and Biological Engineering and Computing.
[12]
P Zipp,et al.
A model of bioelectrode motion artefact and reduction of artefact by amplifier input stage design.
,
1979,
Journal of biomedical engineering.
[13]
L. Kirkup,et al.
A direct comparison of wet, dry and insulating bioelectric recording electrodes.
,
2000,
Physiological measurement.
[14]
George E. Bergey,et al.
Electrocardiogram Recording with Pasteless Electrodes
,
1971
.
[15]
J. H. Huijsing,et al.
Microelectronic skin electrode
,
1990
.
[16]
A. C. MettingVanRijn,et al.
Low-cost active electrode improves the resolution in biopotential recordings
,
1996,
Proceedings of 18th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.
[17]
R. N. Scott,et al.
Noise characteristics of stainless-steel surface electrodes
,
1991,
Medical and Biological Engineering and Computing.
[18]
H. Luczak,et al.
Improved “active” electrodes for recording bioelectric signals in work physiology
,
2004,
European Journal of Applied Physiology and Occupational Physiology.