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A multi-frequency EIT system design based on telecommunication signal processors

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Published 2 June 2009 2009 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine
, , Citation Nicolas Robitaille et al 2009 Physiol. Meas. 30 S57 DOI 10.1088/0967-3334/30/6/S04

0967-3334/30/6/S57

Abstract

A multi-frequency electrical impedance tomography system for cardiopulmonary monitoring has been designed with specialized digital signal processors developed primarily for the telecommunications sector. The system consists of two modules: a scan-head and a base-station. The scan-head, located close to the patient's torso, contains front-end circuits for measuring transfer impedance with a 16-electrode array. The base-station, placed at the bedside, comprises 16 direct digital synthesizers, 32 digital down-converters, digital circuits to control the data acquisition sequence and a USB-2.0 microcontroller. At every step of the scan sequence, the system simultaneously measures four complex variables at eight frequencies. These variables are the potential difference between the selected pair of sense electrodes, the currents applied by the source and sink electrodes, and the current flowing through the ground electrode. Frequencies are programmable from 10 kHz to 2 MHz with a resolution of 2 mHz. Characterization tests were performed with a precision mesh phantom connected to the scan-head. For a 5 Hz frame rate, the mean signal-to-noise ratio and accuracy are, respectively, 43 dB and 95.4% for eight frequencies logarithmically spaced from 70 to 950 kHz. In vitro and in vivo time-difference images have been reconstructed.

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