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Bioelectromagnetism
(deoxyhemoglobin) afer oxygen is released in the capillaries. Tis deoxyhemoglobin causes a slight
distortion of the magnetic felds around intravenous blood vessels. Tis distortion weakens the proton
signal in the vicinity. Tis phenomenon is called the blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) efect.
Using this efect, it is possible to image dynamic changes in local oxygen metabolism and regional
blood fow. As a more advanced imaging technology, functional fMRI was introduced in 1990, due to
the blood-oxygenation level-dependent efect, which was discovered by Seiji Ogawa, now at Tohoku
Fukushi University, and his co-workers at Bell Laboratory (Ogawa et al., 1990a, b, 1992). Hemoglobin
is diamagnetic, and deoxyhemoglobin is paramagnetic which means that the magnetic susceptibility
of these two materials is slightly diferent. Focusing on the NMR signal caused by this slight diference
in magnetic susceptibility, the measurement using the BOLD efects was proposed. Since Ogawa’s pro
posal, fMRI was widely spread interest and applications in neurocognitive and neurophysiological stud
ies. fMRI depends also on the basis of NMR. Since fMRI can image brain activity with high resolution
in a non-invasive manner, fMRI is being used to elucidate the mechanisms of functional brain activity
in the felds of medicine, physiology, cognitive science, and education.
As mentioned above, fMRI focuses on the slight diferences in magnetic susceptibility of materi
als in the blood. Historically, in 1846, Michael Faraday investigated the magnetic properties of dried
blood and found that blood was not magnetic (Faraday, 1846). Pauling pointed out that if he deter
mined the magnetic susceptibilities of atrial and venous blood, he would have found them to difer by
a large amount (as much as 20 per cent) for completely oxygenated and completely deoxygenated blood
(Pauling and Coryell, 1936a).
Aferward, Pauling focused on the oxygen saturation in the blood and the magnetism of the blood.
Linus Carl Pauling (1901–1994), professor at California Institute of Technology, and his student, Charles
Dubois Coryell (1912–1971), later professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), reported
that oxygenated as well as carbonmonoxy forms of hemoglobin were diamagnetic, but discovered that
the deoxygenated protein was magnetic (Pauling and Coryell, 1936a, b). Te magnetic susceptibility of
blood hemoglobin changed as a function of whether it was bound to oxygen or not. Pauling and Coryell
reported that ferrohemoglobin (hemoglobin) is strongly paramagnetic and contains four unpaired elec
trons per heme. Te oxygen molecule, O2, contains two unpaired electrons and is also paramagnetic.
However, when O2 is combined with ferromagnetic to form oxyferrohemoglobin (also called oxyhe
moglobin) with no unpaired electrons and is diamagnetic. Pauling received in 1954 the Nobel Prize in
Chemistry for his research into the nature of the chemical bonds and its application to the elucidation
of the structure of complex substances. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962 for his opposition
to weapons of mass destruction.
2.5.2.3 Bioelectric-Generated Magnetism
Biomagnetism is found in electric current changes. Tis means that biomagnetic felds can be produced
by electric current fow in biological systems. Recording of biomagnetic activity of weak signals is dif
ferent from the recording of bioelectric signals. Te former needs the use of sensitive magnetometers.
Te technical development of sensitive magnetometers requires detecting very weak signals of electrical
phenomena. ECG and EEG measures directly and non-invasively the endogenous oscillatory, electrical
activity in the heart and brain. Magnetocardiography (MCG) and magnetoencephalography can mea
sure indirectly and non-invasively the magnetic felds generated by the changes of electrical activity. Te
time course of ECG and MCG signals are basically similar.
In 1963, Gerhard Baule and Richard McFee, both at Syracuse University, USA, detected for the frst
time MCG of electrical activity in a human heart with an induction coil magnetometer outdoors in an
open feld (Baule and McFee, 1963). Te magnetometer was made by winding two million turns of cop
per wire on a dumbbell-shaped ferrite core (about 30 cm in length and 9 cm in diameter). Te two copper
pick-up coils were connected in opposition so that they canceled the induced voltage from the uniform
magnetic background fuctuations. Later, a group from the USSR repeated the Baule-McFee’s experi
ment and confrmed their experimental results (Cohen, 1969). Cohen pointed out that the measurement