Login / Signup

Two-Electrode ECG for Ambulatory Monitoring with Minimal Hardware Complexity.

Branko BabusiakStefan BorikMaros Smondrk
Published in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
This article introduces a two-electrode ground-free electrocardiogram (ECG) with minimal hardware complexity, which is ideal for wearable battery-powered devices. The main issue of ground-free measurements is the presence of noise. Therefore, noise suppression methods that can be employed for a two-electrode ECG acquisition system are discussed in detail. Experimental measurements of a living subject and patient simulator are used to investigate and compare the performance of the three proposed methods utilizing the ADS1191 analogue front-end for biopotential measurements. The resulting signals recorded for the simulator indicate that all three methods should be suitable for suppressing power-line noise. The Power Spectral Density (PSD) of the signals measured for a subject exhibits differences across methods; the signal power at 50 Hz is -28, -24.8, and -26 dB for the first, second, and third method, respectively. The digital postprocessing of measured signals acquired a high-quality ECG signal comparable to that of three-electrode sensing. The current consumption measurements demonstrate that all proposed two-electrode ECG solutions are appropriate as a battery-powered device (current consumption < 1.5 mA; sampling rate of 500 SPS). The first method, according to the results, is considered the most effective method in the suppression of power-line noise, current consumption, and hardware complexity.
Keyphrases
  • heart rate
  • heart rate variability
  • air pollution
  • solid state
  • carbon nanotubes
  • blood pressure
  • case report
  • signaling pathway
  • optical coherence tomography
  • magnetic resonance