Concepedia

TLDR

The study demonstrates the performance of magnetoimpedance (MI) sensors for recording biomagnetic fields. The authors measured the biomagnetic field surrounding a smooth‑muscle tissue sample from a guinea pig. The MI sensor achieved a noise floor of approximately 3 pT Hz⁻¹/² at 1 Hz, enabling clear detection of magnetic cardiogram signals and showing that the biomagnetic waveform of smooth‑muscle tissue matches its electrical activity, indicating its promise as a noninvasive tool for monitoring cell function. © 2009 WILEY‑VCH Verlag GmbH & Co.

Abstract

Abstract This paper demonstrates the performance of magnetoimpedance (MI) sensors for biomagnetic field recording. The rms noise of an amorphous wire MI sensor with 600 turns of pick‐up coil was estimated as approximately 3 pT/Hz 1/2 at 1 Hz. Here, we demonstrate that this sensitivity is enough to clearly detect magnetic cardiogram signals. We also measured the biomagnetic field around a smooth muscle tissue sample taken from a guinea‐pig. We discovered that the magnetic‐field waveform of a small tissue sample is similar to the voltage waveform measured by a microelectrode array in a smooth muscle sheet sample. The results suggest that the localized biomagnetic field generated by smooth muscle cells can be detected by an MI sensor. We concluded that the MI sensor is a promising device for use as a noninvasive tool to test cell activity or function through magnetic‐field measurement. (© 2009 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)

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