Assessment of bioimpedance spectroscopy devices: a comparative study and error analysis of gold-plated copper electrodes

Objective. Bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) is a non-invasive diagnostic tool to derive fluid volume compartments from frequency dependent voltage drops in alternating currents by extrapolating to the extracellular resistance (R0) and intracellular resistance (Ri). Here we tested whether a novel BIS device with reusable and adhesive single-use electrodes produces results which are (in various body positions) equivalent to an established system employing only single-use adhesive electrodes. Approach. Two BIS devices ('Cella' and the 'Body Composition Monitor' [BCM]) were compared using four dedicated resistance testboxes and by measuring 40 healthy volunteers. Invivo comparisons included supine wrist-to-ankle (WA) reference measurements and wrist-to-wrist (WW) measurements with pre-gelled silver/silver-chloride (Ag/AgCl) electrodes and WW measurements with reusable gold-plated copper electrodes. Main results. Coefficient of variation were
Source: Physiological Measurement - Category: Physiology Authors: Source Type: research
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