Instrumentation Biomedical: The Origin of Bio-Potentials
Instrumentation Biomedical: The Origin of Bio-Potentials
Instrumentation Biomedical: The Origin of Bio-Potentials
Instrumentation of Bio-
Potentials
Winter 1393
Bonab
University
CH-4
Bioelectric Signals Bio-Potentials
2
(ERG)
CH-4
Bioelectric Signals Bio-Potentials
3
CH-4
The Resting State Bio-Potentials
Cl- Cl- K+
K+ Electric Field
+ -
+ -
+ -
+ -
+ -
+ -
+ -
+ - Electric Field
+ -
+ -
For the frog skeletal muscle, typical values for the intracellular and extracellular
concentrations for the major ion species (in millimoles per liter) are as follows.
(PNa = 2*10-8 cm/s, Pk = 2*10-6 cm/s, and PCl = 4*10-6 cm/s), calculate the
equilibrium resting potential for this membrane, using the Goldman equation.
7
CH-4
Solution Bio-Potentials
8
CH-4
The Active State Bio-Potentials
Depolarization : lessening the magnitude of cell polarization by making inside the cell
less negative.
Hyperpolarization : increasing the magnitude of cell polarization by making inside the
cell more negative.
A stimulus that depolarize the cell to a potential higher than the threshold potential
causes the cell to generate an action potential.
Action Potential:
- Rate: 1000 action potential per second for nerve
- All-or-none
- v = 120 mV for nerve (duration ~=
1ms)
9
CH-4
Action Potential Bio-Potentials
Electric Field + -
+ -
+ -
K+
- +
Electric Field - +
- +
10
CH-4
Action Potential Bio-Potentials
11
CH-4
Action Potential Bio-Potentials
12
CH-4
Action Potential (Propagating) Bio-Potentials
Schwann Cell
Myelination reduces leakage currents and improve Node of
Ranvier
transmission rate by a factor of approximately 20.
13
CH-4
Action Potential Bio-Potentials
14
CH-4
Volume Conductor Fields Bio-Potentials
17
Peripheral CH-4
Nervous Bio-Potentials
System
18
CH-4
Peripheral Nervous System (somatic) Bio-Potentials
Function
Spinal nervous system is functionally organized on the basis of what is called the reflex
arc:
1.A sense organ: (ear-sound, eye-light, skin-
temperature)
2.A sensory nerve: (transmit information to the
CNS)
3.The CNS: serves as a central integrating station
19
CH-4
Example of reflex arc Bio-Potentials
20
CH-4
Muscle length control Bio-Potentials
(Feedback)
21
CH-4
Junctional Transmission Bio-Potentials
end-plate region
23
CH-4
Electroneurogram (ENG) Bio-Potentials
24
CH-4
Conduction Velocity of a Nerve Bio-Potentials
V°(t)
S1 S2
+ + R Reference
D Muscle
Subtraction of longer
latency and shorter
S2
V°(t)
L2 t DL1
S1 Velocity = u =
V°(t)
L2
1 mV
L1
2 ms
Figure 4.8 Sensory nerve action potentials evoked from median nerve of a healthy subject at elbow and wrist after
stimulation of index finger with ring electrodes. The potential at the wrist is triphasic and of much larger magnitude than the
delayed potential recorded at the elbow. Considering the median nerve to be of the same size and shape at the elbow as at
the wrist, we find that the difference in magnitude and waveshape of the potentials is due to the size of the volume conductor
at each location and the radial distance of the measurement point from the neural source.
26
CH-4
Bio-Potentials
27
CH-4
Nerve repair Bio-Potentials
28
CH-4
Reflexly Evoked Field Potentials Bio-Potentials
30
CH-4
Muscle Fiber (Cell) Bio-Potentials
31 http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/matthews/myosin.html
CH-4
EMG Bio-Potentials
32