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  3. Modulation Scheme Analysis for Low-Power Leadless Pacemaker Synchronization Based on Conductive Intracardiac Communication
 

Modulation Scheme Analysis for Low-Power Leadless Pacemaker Synchronization Based on Conductive Intracardiac Communication

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/172388
Date of Publication
May 27, 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

School of Biomedical ...

ARTORG Center - Cardi...

sitem Zentrum für Tra...

Universitätsklinik fü...

Contributor
Ryser, Adrianorcid-logo
School of Biomedical and Precision Engineering (SBPE)
Universitätsklinik für Kardiologie
sitem Zentrum für Translationale Medizin und Biomedizinisches Unternehmertum
Schmid, Tobias
Bereuter, Lukas Davidorcid-logo
ARTORG Center - Cardiovascular Engineering (CVE)
Burger, Jürgen
sitem Zentrum für Translationale Medizin und Biomedizinisches Unternehmertum
Reichlin, Tobias Romanorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Kardiologie
Niederhauser, Thomas
Häberlin, Andreas David Heinrichorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Kardiologie
ARTORG Center - Biomechanics
sitem Zentrum für Translationale Medizin und Biomedizinisches Unternehmertum
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

600 - Technology::620...

Series
IEEE transactions on biomedical circuits and systems
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1932-4545
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1109/TBCAS.2022.3178444
PubMed ID
35622811
Description
Conductive intracardiac communication (CIC) has been demonstrated as a promising concept for the synchronization of multi-chamber leadless cardiac pacemakers (LLPMs). To meet the 2–5 μW power budget of a LLPM, highly specialized CIC-transceivers, which make optimal use of the cardiac communication channel, need to be developed. However, a detailed investigation of the optimal communication parameters for CIC-based LLPM synchronization is missing so far. This work analyzes the intracardiac communication performance of two low-power modulation techniques, namely On-Off-Keying (OOK) and Manchester-encoded baseband transmission (BB-MAN), as a function of the transmitted bit-energy. The bit error rate (BER) of a prototype dual-chamber LLPM was determined both in simulation and in-vitro experiments on porcine hearts. A BER of 1e−4 was achieved with a median bit-energy in the range of 3-16 pJ (interquartile range: 4-15 pJ) for data rates from 75-500 kbps and a receiver input noise density of 7 nV/√Hz. Both modulation schemes showed comparable performance, with BB-MAN having a slight bit-energy advantage (1-2 dB at 150-500 kbps) under equalized transceiver characteristics. This study demonstrates that reliable CIC-based LLPM synchronization is feasible at transmitted power levels <10 nW under realistic channel conditions and receiver noise performance. Therefore, modulation techniques such, as BB-MAN or OOK, are preferable over recently proposed alternatives, such as pulse position modulation or conductive impulse signaling, since they can be realized with fewer hardware resources and smaller bandwidth requirements. Ultimately, a baseband communication approach might be favored over OOK, due to the more efficient cardiac signal transmission and reduced transceiver complexity.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/202057
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Modulation_Scheme_Analysis_for_Low-Power_Leadless_Pacemaker_Synchronization_Based_on_Conductive_Intracardiac_Communication.pdftextAdobe PDF1.98 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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