| Literature DB >> 30830737 |
Gavin R Philips, Bernhard Gleich1, Genaro A Paredes-Juarez, Antonella Antonelli2, Mauro Magnani2, Jeff W M Bulte.
Abstract
The active and passive electrophysiological properties of blood and tissue have been utilized in a vast array of clinical techniques to noninvasively characterize anatomy and physiology and to diagnose a wide variety of pathologies. However, the accuracy and spatial resolution of such techniques are limited by several factors, including an ill-posed inverse problem, which determines biological parameters and signal sources from surface potentials. Here, we propose a method to noninvasively modulate tissue conductivity by aligning superparamagnetic iron oxide-loaded erythrocytes with an oscillating magnetic field. A prototype device is presented, which incorporates a three-dimensional set of Helmholtz coil pairs and fluid-channel-embedded electrode arrays. Alignment of loaded cells (∼11 mM iron) within a field of 12 mT is demonstrated, and this directed reorientation is shown to alter the conductivity of blood by ∼5 and ∼0.5% for stationary and flowing blood, respectively, within fields as weak as 6-12 mT. Focal modulation of conductivity could drastically improve numerous bioimpedance-based detection modalities.Entities:
Keywords: bioimpedance; blood conductivity; electrophysiology; iron oxide nanoparticles; red blood cells
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30830737 PMCID: PMC6487860 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b00394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229