6533b829fe1ef96bd128a3d4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Suppression of the cardiac electric field artifact from the heart action evoked potential

Juan A. BarciaEnrique GuijarroJuan J. Pérez

subject

AdultMaleField (physics)Biomedical EngineeringQRS complexElectric fieldCranial cavitymedicineHumansEvoked potentialEvoked PotentialsPhysicsArtifact (error)SkullElectric ConductivityElectroencephalographyHeartSignal Processing Computer-AssistedMiddle AgedComputer Science ApplicationsAmplitudemedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleElectric currentArtifactsBiomedical engineering

description

The study of heart action-related brain potentials is strongly disrupted by the presence of an inherent cardiac electric artifact. The hypothesis is presented that most of the electric current coupled to the cardiac field surrounds the skull and flows through the scalp tissue without crossing the cranial cavity. This pseudo two-dimensional conduction model contrasts with the volumetric conduction of the brain electrical activity, and this property is exploited to cancel the cardiac electric artifact. QRS loop vector-cardiographic projections on saggital planes were recorded in 11 healthy subjects in the head and neck areas. Comparative analysis of the projection eccentricities, estimated by the correlation coefficients of the paired data on each area, supported the hypothesis and allowed the handling of the cardiac electric field at the scalp as if enclosed in a two-dimensional wrapped space. This approach permitted the combination of different heart action-related brain potentials recorded at different electrode positions to cancel the cardiac electric artifact. The cancellation method, applied to the subjects' EEG data, yielded a slow cortical potential with a negligible cardiac electric residue and an amplitude of about 1.5-2 microV, with a maximum around 150 ms and a minimum at 400 ms post-R wave.

https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02351030