Roth, B. J., 2023, Biomagnetism: The first sixty years. Sensors, 23:4218. |
Biomagnetism is the measurement of the weak magnetic fields produced by nerves and muscle. The magnetic field of the heart—the magnetocardiogram (MCG)—is the largest biomagnetic signal generated by the body and was the first measured. Magnetic fields have been detected from isolated tissue, such as a peripheral nerve or cardiac muscle, and these studies have provided insights into the fundamental properties of biomagnetism. The magnetic field of the brain—the magnetoencephalogram (MEG)—has generated much interest and has potential clinical applications to epilepsy, migraine, and psychiatric disorders. The biomagnetic inverse problem, calculating the electrical sources inside the brain from magnetic field recordings made outside the head, is difficult, but several techniques have been introduced to solve it. Traditionally biomagnetic fields are recorded using superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometers, but recently new sensors have been developed that allow magnetic measurements without the cryogenic technology required for SQUIDs.
The “First Sixty Years” refers to this year (2023) being six decades since the original biomagnetism publication in 1963, when Baule and McFee first measured the magnetocardiogram.
My article completes a series of six reviews I’ve published in the last few years.
- Roth, B. J., 2021, Bidomain modeling of electrical and mechanical properties of cardiac tissue. Biophysics Reviews, 2:041301.
- Roth, B. J., 2022, The development of transcranial magnetic stimulation. BOHR International Journal of Neurology and Neuroscience, 1:8–20.
- Roth, B. J., 2023, Can MRI be used as a sensor to record neural activity? Sensors, 23:1337.
- Roth, B. J., 2023, A mathematical model of mechanotransduction. Academia Biology, 1.
- Roth, B. J., 2023, Magneto-acoustic imaging in biology. Applied Sciences, 13:3877.
- Roth, B. J., 2023, Biomagnetism: The first sixty years. Sensors, 23:4218.
Get the whole set! All are open access except the first. If you need a copy of that one, just email me at roth@oakland.edu and I’ll send you a pdf.
I’m not preparing any other reviews, so this will probably be the last one. But, you never know.
You can learn more about biomagnetism in Chapter 8 of Intermediate Physics for Medicine and Biology.
Enjoy!
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