ECE795_lecture10
ECE795_lecture10
Quantitative
Electrophysiology
Notes for Lecture #10
Friday, November 28, 2008
15. PRACTICAL ISSUES AND
CLINICAL APPLICATION OF FES
2
Stimulator
3
Stimulus Parameters
7
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
The equivalent electrical circuit of the
electrode-tissue interface will therefore
incorporate this capacitance in parallel with
a resistance that reflects the electrode-
electrolyte charge movement that results
from both reversible and irreversible
electrochemical Faradaic reactions.
An experimental set-up for analysing this
behaviour is shown on the next slide.
8
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
9
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
An RC voltage response is consequently
observed in the electrode-tissue interface
response to a current step.
10
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
The operating characteristics of an electrode
depend on:
¾ the effective capacitance C and R per
unit area, and C,R = f(IS,Freq) when IS
> 1 mA/cm2
¾ the reversible or irreversible
electrochemical reaction between the
electrode and electrolyte.
A graphical scheme for analysing electrode
performance is shown on the next slide.
11
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
12
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
In the central region, the capacitance of the
electrode-electrolyte interface dominates. It
is desirable to operate within this region and
thus avoid Faradaic reactions at the
interface, but the charge delivered may not
be sufficient to achieve nerve activation.
Exceeding the limits of the linear region, i.e.,
delivering charge beyond points I or II (or
both), introduces Faradaic conditions (i.e.,
electrochemical reactions). 13
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
For example, a stainless steel electrode that is
driven beyond point I by an anodic potential may
experience the irreversible reaction:
which is reversible.
For cathodic potentials the reaction may be of the
form:
18
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
If QP ≠ −QS, then steady-state operation must
involve some irreversible behaviour.
22
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
1. B — Brain: penetrating electrodes
a. Passive implants – can cause trauma
to brain tissue.
b. Active implants – mainly silicon
based.
23
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
2. Nerve (cuff electrodes)
Surround nerve bundle for confined
stimulation, reducing the required
current.
24
Electrodes and electrode-tissue behavior
(cont.):
3. Intramuscular (coiled-wire electrodes)
a. Passive implants – subjected to mechanical
strains; become encapsulated.
b. Active implants – actually stimulate motor
axons, not muscle fibers.
i. monophasic: some irreversible cathodic
processes tolerated for low currents;
ii. balanced biphasic: moderate-high currents can
be used without degrading electrode;
iii. imbalanced biphasic: moderate currents are
permissible because of blood buffering. 25
Clinical applications:
Because of the problems involved with
spatial selectivity and recruitment, FES has
been most successful in clinical applications
where these two issues are not so crucial,
for example:
¾ heart pacemakers, cochlear implants,
bladder control, respiratory control, gross
motor movements.
More challenging for clinical application are:
¾ fine motor control, retinal implants, etc.
26
Pacemakers:
¾ First major application of electrical
stimulation of excitable cells
¾ Stimulate just ventricles, or atria and
ventricles (dual-chamber)
¾ Typically platinum or platinum-iridium
electrodes, monopolar or bipolar
¾ Monophasic or biphasic waveforms used
¾ Both cathode make excitation and anode
break excitation are likely to occur
27
Cardiac Pacing
28
29
Functional electrical stimulation (FES)
32
33
Upper limb stimulation:
¾ Stimulates peripheral nerve fibers of
motor neurons
¾ Used in spinal cord injury or stroke
patients
34
Lower limb stimulation:
¾ Footdrop control
¾ Standing control
35
Bladder control:
¾ Intradural or extradural electrodes
¾ Stimulation can lead to bladder and
sphincter contraction – intermittent
stimulation can overcome this problem
36
Phrenic nerve stimulator:
¾ Provides diaphragm pacing to aid
respiration
¾ Bilateral stimulation for symmetrical
activation of the diaphragm
37
Stimulating Electrode
38
Cochlear Implant
39