| Literature DB >> 24949644 |
Sami F Khalil1, Mas S Mohktar2, Fatimah Ibrahim3.
Abstract
Bioimpedance analysis is a noninvasive, low cost and a commonly used approach for body composition measurements and assessment of clinical condition. There are a variety of methods applied for interpretation of measured bioimpedance data and a wide range of utilizations of bioimpedance in body composition estimation and evaluation of clinical status. This paper reviews the main concepts of bioimpedance measurement techniques including the frequency based, the allocation based, bioimpedance vector analysis and the real time bioimpedance analysis systems. Commonly used prediction equations for body composition assessment and influence of anthropometric measurements, gender, ethnic groups, postures, measurements protocols and electrode artifacts in estimated values are also discussed. In addition, this paper also contributes to the deliberations of bioimpedance analysis assessment of abnormal loss in lean body mass and unbalanced shift in body fluids and to the summary of diagnostic usage in different kinds of conditions such as cardiac, pulmonary, renal, and neural and infection diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24949644 PMCID: PMC4118362 DOI: 10.3390/s140610895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.Main body segments and compartments.
Figure 2.Cole-Cole module plot and Cole module parameters.
Figure 3.Whole body bioimpedance measurement techniques, (a) hand to foot and (b) foot to foot electrodes positioning.
Figure 4.Segmental bioimpedance analysis techniques, (a) right side dual current and quad voltage electrodes, (b) right side dual current and quad voltage electrodes, (c) double sides dual current and quad voltage electrodes and (d) double sides quad current and quad voltage electrodes.
Figure 5.Bioimpedance vector analysis (BIVA) and tolerance ellipses.
Applications of bioimpedance analysis in clinical status monitoring and diagnosis of diseases.
| Organ Systems | Diseases | BIA Parameters | Remarks | Authors |
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| Pulmonary system | Lung cancer, stages IIIB and IV | R and Xc (BIVA) | Reactance components decrease in patients (phase angle <4.5). | Toso |
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| Pulmonary edema monitoring | R (SFBIA) | Mean resistivity for left and right lung (1205 ± 163, 1200 ± 165 Ω·cm) and system reproducibility (2%). | Zlochiver | |
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| Cardio-vascular system | Fluid accumulation after cardiac surgery. | Ht2/Z (MFBIA) | Significant increase in segmental trunk bioimpedance after surgery due to fluid accumulation. | Bracco |
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| Circulatory system | Volaemic status and hyponatraemia | TBW (SFBIA) | In elderly hyponatraemic patients, TBW assessment using BIA method was correlated with dilution of deuterium oxide (R = 0.68). | Hoyle |
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| Hydration status and hyponatraemia in elderly | TBW (SFBIA) | Assessment of hydration status in elderly hyponatraemic patients using BIA method was more accurate than clinical procedures (Cohen's kappa coefficient = 0.52). | Cumming | |
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| Renal system | Chronic hemodialysis | ECF (BIS) | ECF to weight ratio of hypertensive patient's increase from that of normal patients (24.29 ± 3.56% | Chen |
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| Dry weight in kidney failure. | ECF (BIS) | ECF/Wt is 0.239 and 0.214 L/kg for male and female healthy subjects. | Chamney | |
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| Hydration states monitoring in hemodialysis patients | Calf-BIS (BIS) | Normalized resistivity (μ = ρ /BMI) increased from 17.9 ± 3 to 19.1 ± 2.3 × 10−2 Ω3·Kg−1, and weight was reduced from 78.3 ± 28 to 77.1 ± 27 kg in Post-dialysis. | Zhu | |
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| Dry weight assessment hemodialysis patients | Calf-BIS (BIS) | Dry weight assessed by cBIS underestimate left ventricular mass and blood pressure while antihypertensive medication remains unchanged. | Seibert | |
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| Body fluids estimation in hemodialysis patients | ECF, ICF and TBW (BIS) | Correlation between proposed equation corrected for BMI and the references (mean ± SD) was −0.4 ± 1.4 L for ECF, 0.2 ± 2.0 L for ICF and −0.2 ± 2.3 L for TBW. | Moissl | |
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| Dry weight assessment HD patients | R and Xc (BIVA) | BIVA method shows significant different in vectors in post dialysed patients. | Atilano | |
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| Neural system | Alzheimer's disease | R and Xc (BIVA) | BCM decreased in patients for men, T2 (Hotelling's statistic) = 12.8 and for women, T2 = 34.9. | Buffa |
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| Anorexia nervosa (eating disorder) | FM, FFM, TBW and ECF (BIS) | The BCM to Ht2 ratio was found to be significantly changed between diseased and controls subjects. | Moreno | |
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| Anorexia nervosa (eating disorder) | R and Xc (BIVA) | Gradually increasing in BCM and decreasing in ECF during treatments. | Haas | |
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| Muscular system | Body composition changes monitoring during exercise training | FFM and FM (MFBIA) | BIA method underestimates FM (−3.42 kg) and overestimated FFM (3.18 kg); and undetected small shift in body composition due to exercise training. | Sillanpää |
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| Immunology system | Comparison between SFBIA and MFBIA in HIV patients | ECF and TBW (BIS) | Insignificant differences in TBW and ECF estimation using SFBIA, MFBIA and BIS methods. | Paton |
| Dengue haemorrhagic fever estimation in children | ECF and ICF (BIS) | (ECF/ICF) increase with increasing dengue virus infections severity in children. | Libraty | |
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| Cancer patients | TBW (SFBIA) | Change in TBW using BIA method (Ht2/R50) correlate with deuterium dilution in underweight and normal-weight cancer patients (R2 = 0.43 and SEE = 1.22 L). | Simons | |
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| Early diagnosis and risk analysis of dengue | R, C, φ and Xc (SFBIA) | Reactance variations among dengue patients during defervescence of feverintervalis an indicator for classifying risk category in the DHF patients. | Ibrahim | |
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| Other diseases | Critically ill subjects | FM, TBW and ECF (BIS) | Body composition using BIS method show slightly more significant in estimation of FM, TBW and ECF among healthy and diseased subjects. | Pichler |
| Gastrointestinal disease | R, Xc, Fc, FFM, TBW, ECF and ICF (BIS) | In critically diseased subjects, Fc and ECF increased, Xc decreased, and TBW and ICF remain the same. | Cox-Reijven | |