Bioimpedance

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In biomedical engineering, bioimpedance is a term used to describe the response of a living organism to an externally applied electric current. It is a measure of the oppostion to the flow of that electric current through the tissues, the opposite of electrical conductivity. The measurement of the bioimpedance (or bioelectrical impedance) of the humans and animals has proved useful as a non-invasive method for measuring such things as blood flow (often referred to as bioimpedance plethysmography) and body composition (known as bioelectrical impedance analysis or simply BIA).

In bioimpedance plethysmography, the measure is sometimes based on pulsatile blood volume changes in the aorta. Bioimpedance is relevant to the development of devices to measure cardiac output and circulating blood volume. Electrical conductivity can vary as a result of breathing. Because of this and other sources of variability, the reliability of bioimpedance for obtaining accurate data has been called into question. Nevertheless, the technique is used in both routine clinical medicine and research.

BIA has found a much sounder footing and is the basis of a number of commercially available body composition analysers. See Bioelectrical impedance analysis for more details.

All of the information in this article above came from personal communication (2005) with University of Southern California biomedical engineering lecturer Jean-Michel I. Maarek, Ph.D.. Subsequently modified by Dr Leigh Ward of the University of Queensland with the assistance of Dr Scott Chetham, Impedimed Ltd, who maintains the bioimpedance information site Bioimpedance Analysis Electronic Media Review [1] and is the Australasian representative for the International Society for Electrical Bioimpedance.


Biological resistivity ρ
tissue Ω.cm
blood 150
urine 30
muscle 300-1600
lung 1275
fat 2500


[edit] Links

International Society For Electrical Bio-Impedance

Bioimpedance Analysis Electronic Media Review


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