Design and Development of Medical Electronic Instrumentation

Chapter 2 - Bandpass Selection For Biopotential Amplifiers

As shown in Table 2.1, common biopotential signals span the range dc to 10 kHz. Under
ideal conditions, a biopotential amplifier with wideband response would serve most applications.
However, the presence of common-mode potentials, electrode polarization, and
other interfering signals often obscure the biopotential signal under investigation. As such,
the frequency response of a biopotential amplifier should be tuned to the specific spectral
content expected from the application at hand.

Spectral analysis is the most common way of determining the bandwidth required to
process physiological signals. For a first estimate, however, the rigors of spectral analysis
can be avoided simply by evaluating the durations of high- and low-frequency components
of the signal. Koide [1996] proposed a method for estimating the -3-dB bandpass based
on acceptable distortion.

The duration of the highest-frequency component, tHF, is estimated from a stereotypical
signal to be the minimum rise or fall time of a signal variation. The duration of the lowest-
frequency component, tLF, on the other hand, is measured from the tilt of the baseline or
of the lowest-frequency component of interest. Koide illustrated this with an example.
Figure 2.1 shows a stereotypical intracellular potential measured from the pacemaker cells
in a mammalian heart SA node. In this example, tHF = 75 ms and tLF = 610 ms. Using the
formulas of Table 2.2, the amplification system must have a -3-dB bandpass of 0.0026 to
41.3 Hz to reproduce the signal with negligible distortion (1%). Acceptable distortion,
usually considered to be 5% or less for physiological signals, would require a narrower
-3-dB bandpass, of 0.013 to 18.7 Hz.

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