World’s first battery-less pacemaker in the works
BY Agencies2 Sept 2014 5:31 AM IST
Agencies2 Sept 2014 5:31 AM IST
This new type of cardiac pacemaker is based on a commercially available, automatic wristwatch and does not require battery replacement.
‘The heart seems to be a very promising energy source because its contractions are repetitive and present for 24 hours a day, seven days a week,’ said Adrian Zurbuchen, a PhD candidate from the cardio-vascular engineering group in the University of Bern, Switzerland.
To test the watch, researchers developed an electronic circuit to transform and store the signal into a small buffer capacity.
They then connected the system to a custom-made cardiac pacemaker. The system worked in three steps. First, the watch acquired energy from the heart. Second, the energy was temporarily stored in the buffer capacity.
And finally, the buffered energy was used by the pacemaker to apply minute stimuli to the heart.
The researchers successfully tested the system in experiments with domestic pigs.
The energy harvesting system has the potential to avoid both disadvantages by providing the world with a battery-less and lead-less pacemaker.
‘The heart seems to be a very promising energy source because its contractions are repetitive and present for 24 hours a day, seven days a week,’ said Adrian Zurbuchen, a PhD candidate from the cardio-vascular engineering group in the University of Bern, Switzerland.
To test the watch, researchers developed an electronic circuit to transform and store the signal into a small buffer capacity.
They then connected the system to a custom-made cardiac pacemaker. The system worked in three steps. First, the watch acquired energy from the heart. Second, the energy was temporarily stored in the buffer capacity.
And finally, the buffered energy was used by the pacemaker to apply minute stimuli to the heart.
The researchers successfully tested the system in experiments with domestic pigs.
The energy harvesting system has the potential to avoid both disadvantages by providing the world with a battery-less and lead-less pacemaker.
Next Story