Analog and Power Electronics in Medicine and Biomedical Research

Electromagnetic fields play a key role in modern medicine and medical nanotechnology. They allow looking into the body, particularly the brain, measure the anatomy in 3D, detect activation, read but also write signals. Electromagnetic fields can be used for a number of additional applications.

The course will give students from engineering and physics an introduction to the use of technology for medical purposes. The starting point of the course will be the nervous system and the brain as a widely electrical system.

Topics that will be covered:

  • neuroengineering and an introduction to basic neurophysiology
  • fundamental basic neuroanatomy
  • physics of signaling in neurons
  • electromagnetic properties of body tissue
  • detecting neural signals in the central (brain/spine) and the peripheral nervous system
  • cardiac monitoring (electrocardiography, ecg) and stimulation (defibrillation and pace making)
  • neurostimulation and neuromodulation: writing signals into the brain (invasively and noninvasively)
  • brain–machine interfaces
  • design of circuits to detect neural signals as well as to stimulate/modulate neural circuits
  • basics of imaging
  • magnetic resonance imaging for anatomical, functional, and connectivity scanning
  • introduction to medical device standards and device safety

 In addition to the script, there will be mandatory readings from magazines and scholarly journals.

 

Literature

  • R. Plonsey, R. Barr. Bioelectricity: A Quantitative Approach. 3rd edition, Springer, Berlin, 2007.
  • M. Akay. Handbook of Neural Engineering. Wiley/IEEE Press, Hoboken (NJ), 2007.
  • B. He. Neural Engineering. Kluwer Academic, New York, 2005.
  • R. Ilmoniemi, J. Sarvas. Brain signals: Physics and mathematics of MEG and EEG. The MIT Press, Cambridge (MA), 2019.
  • B. Elahi. Safety Risk Management for Medical Devices. Academic Press, London, 2018.
  • Leonard Eisner, Robert M. Brown, and Dan Modi. IEC 60601-1: Medical Device Marking and Labeling. https://www.mddionline.com/iec-60601-1-medical-device-marking-and-labeling, retrieved: 10/1/2019

Dozent

Prof. Dr.-Ing. Stefan Götz
Gebäude 11, Raum 376
Tel.: 2080
Mail: goetz(at)eit.uni-kl.de


Übungsleiter

Dipl.-Ing. Bertrand Ngansop Ngansop
Gebäude 11, Raum 309
Tel.: 2082
Mail: 

 

Dr.-Ing. Nima Tashakor
Gebäude 11, Raum 311
Tel.: 2081
Mail: tashakor(at)eit.uni-kl.de


Vorlesungsunterlagen

Downloads zu Vorlesung und Übungen finden Sie im entsprechenden OLAT-Kurs.