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Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis
Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology, Volume: 22
Swansea University Authors: DALE KERNOT, Hari Arora , Raoul van Loon
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DOI (Published version): 10.1007/s10237-022-01646-6
Abstract
Microwave ablation therapy is a hyperthermic treatment for killing cancerous tumours whereby microwave energy is dispersed into a target tissue region. Modelling can provide a prediction for the outcome of ablation, this paper explores changes in size and shape of temperature and Specific absorption...
Published in: | Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology |
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ISSN: | 1617-7959 1617-7940 |
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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
2022
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa61532 |
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2023-06-12T17:08:31.8766795 v2 61532 2022-10-11 Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis c5212b8a5f533d2032d490b234c5e90a DALE KERNOT DALE KERNOT true false ed7371c768e9746008a6807f9f7a1555 0000-0002-9790-0907 Hari Arora Hari Arora true false 880b30f90841a022f1e5bac32fb12193 0000-0003-3581-5827 Raoul van Loon Raoul van Loon true false 2022-10-11 Microwave ablation therapy is a hyperthermic treatment for killing cancerous tumours whereby microwave energy is dispersed into a target tissue region. Modelling can provide a prediction for the outcome of ablation, this paper explores changes in size and shape of temperature and Specific absorption rate fields throughout the course of simulated treatment with different probe concepts. Here, an axisymmetric geometry of a probe embedded within a tissue material is created, solving coupled electromagnetic and bioheat equations using the finite element method, utilizing hp discretisation with the NGSolve library. Results show dynamic changes across all metrics, with different responses from different probe concepts. The sleeve probe yielded the most circular specific absorption rate pattern with circularity of 0.81 initially but suffered the largest reduction throughout ablation. Similarly, reflection coefficients differ drastically from their initial values, with the sleeve probe again experiencing the largest change, suggesting that it is the most sensitive the changes in the tissue dielectric properties in these select probe designs. These collective characteristic observations highlight the need to consider dielectric property changes and probe specific responses during the design cycle. Journal Article Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology 22 Springer Science and Business Media LLC 1617-7959 1617-7940 Microwave ablation (MWA); Bioheat; Hyperthermal treatment; Numerical simulation; Shape analysis; Temperature sensitivity 26 10 2022 2022-10-26 10.1007/s10237-022-01646-6 COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University SU Library paid the OA fee (TA Institutional Deal) This work is part-funded by the European Social Fund through the European Union’s Convergence programme administered by the Welsh Government, and Olympus Surgical Technologies Europe. I would like to acknowledge the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council for their support through grant EP/V009028/1. Author DK received research support from Olympus Surgical Technologies Europe. 2023-06-12T17:08:31.8766795 2022-10-11T16:04:34.5164968 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Uncategorised DALE KERNOT 1 Jimmy Yang 2 Nicholas Williams 3 Tudor Thomas 4 Paul Ledger 5 Hari Arora 0000-0002-9790-0907 6 Raoul van Loon 0000-0003-3581-5827 7 61532__25604__434047e06dec4ff2ad142fa3243d9ccc.pdf 61532_VoR.pdf 2022-10-28T11:44:53.6047505 Output 1071088 application/pdf Version of Record true © The Author(s) 2022. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
title |
Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis |
spellingShingle |
Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis DALE KERNOT Hari Arora Raoul van Loon |
title_short |
Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis |
title_full |
Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis |
title_fullStr |
Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis |
title_sort |
Transient changes during microwave ablation simulation : a comparative shape analysis |
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c5212b8a5f533d2032d490b234c5e90a ed7371c768e9746008a6807f9f7a1555 880b30f90841a022f1e5bac32fb12193 |
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c5212b8a5f533d2032d490b234c5e90a_***_DALE KERNOT ed7371c768e9746008a6807f9f7a1555_***_Hari Arora 880b30f90841a022f1e5bac32fb12193_***_Raoul van Loon |
author |
DALE KERNOT Hari Arora Raoul van Loon |
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DALE KERNOT Jimmy Yang Nicholas Williams Tudor Thomas Paul Ledger Hari Arora Raoul van Loon |
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Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology |
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Springer Science and Business Media LLC |
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Microwave ablation therapy is a hyperthermic treatment for killing cancerous tumours whereby microwave energy is dispersed into a target tissue region. Modelling can provide a prediction for the outcome of ablation, this paper explores changes in size and shape of temperature and Specific absorption rate fields throughout the course of simulated treatment with different probe concepts. Here, an axisymmetric geometry of a probe embedded within a tissue material is created, solving coupled electromagnetic and bioheat equations using the finite element method, utilizing hp discretisation with the NGSolve library. Results show dynamic changes across all metrics, with different responses from different probe concepts. The sleeve probe yielded the most circular specific absorption rate pattern with circularity of 0.81 initially but suffered the largest reduction throughout ablation. Similarly, reflection coefficients differ drastically from their initial values, with the sleeve probe again experiencing the largest change, suggesting that it is the most sensitive the changes in the tissue dielectric properties in these select probe designs. These collective characteristic observations highlight the need to consider dielectric property changes and probe specific responses during the design cycle. |
published_date |
2022-10-26T14:19:20Z |
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1821324880435478528 |
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11.048042 |