4.7 Article

Effects of magnetogastrography sensor configurations in tracking slow wave propagation

Journal

COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 129, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2020.104169

Keywords

Magnetogastrography; Slow waves; Biomagnetism; Finite element method

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health [R01 088662]
  2. Marsden Fund Council of New Zealand
  3. Health Research Council of New Zealand
  4. Medical Technologies Centre of Research Excellence (MedTech CoRE), New Zealand
  5. University of Auckland Doctoral Scholarship

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The study found that higher density and coverage sensor layouts in magnetogastrography (MGG) improve the utility of tracking slow wave (SW) propagation. Further research is needed to explore the optimal sensor configurations across larger anatomical variations and other SW propagation patterns.
Magnetogastrography (MGG) is a non-invasive method of assessing gastric slow waves (SWs) by recording the resultant magnetic fields. MGG can capture both SW frequency and propagation, and identify SW dysrhythmias that are associated with motility disorders. However, the impact of the restricted spatial coverage and sensor density on SW propagation tracking performance is unknown. This study simulated MGG using multiple anatomically specific torso geometries and two realistic SW propagation patterns to determine the effect of different sensor configurations on tracking SW propagation. The surface current density mapping and center-ofgravity tracking methods were used to compare four magnetometer array configurations: a reference system currently used in GI research and three hypothetical higher density and coverage arrays. SW propagation patterns identified with two hypothetical arrays (with coverage over at least the anterior of the torso) correlated significantly higher with simulated realistic 3 cycle-per-minute SW activity than the reference array (p = 0.016, p = 0.005). Furthermore, results indicated that most of the magnetic fields that contribute to the performance of SW propagation tracking were located on the anterior of the torso as further increasing the coverage did not significantly increase performance. A 30% decrease in sensor spacing within the same spatial coverage of the reference array also significantly increased correlation values by approximately 0.50 when the signal-to-noise ratio was 5 dB. This study provides evidence that higher density and coverage sensor layouts will improve the utility of MGG. Further work is required to investigate optimum sensor configurations across larger anatomical variations and other SW propagation patterns.

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