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Evaluation of the Parallel Conductor Theory for Measuring Human Limb Blood Flow by Electrical Admittance Plethysmography
23
Citations
13
References
1982
Year
Medical ElectronicsEngineeringMeasurementElectrical Admittance PlethysmographyWearable TechnologyAdmittance ChangeParallel Conductor TheoryBiomedical EngineeringMedical InstrumentationBlood FlowElectrophysiological EvaluationKinesiologyApplied PhysiologyCompensation TechniqueBlood Flow MeasurementHealth SciencesElectrical AdmittanceBiomedical FlowElectrophysiologyHuman Movement
We devised a compensation technique that measures the admittance change of a limb submerged in an electrolyte solution in a cylinder. Using this technique, we evaluated the accuracy of admittance plethysmography and the validity of the parallel-conductor model on which the theory of blood flow measurement by electrical admittance (or impedance) plethysmography is based. From a theoretical point of view, if a limb is regarded as a parallel-conductor model, the admittance change due to blood pooling following venous occlusion should disappear when the resistivity of the solution is equal to that of the blood.
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