Title :
Modeling and Validation of Microwave Ablations With Internal Vaporization
Author :
Chiang, Jason ; Birla, S. ; Bedoya, Mariajose ; Jones, David ; Subbiah, J. ; Brace, Christopher L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng. & Dept. of Radiol., Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Abstract :
Numerical simulation is increasingly being utilized for computer-aided design of treatment devices, analysis of ablation growth, and clinical treatment planning. Simulation models to date have incorporated electromagnetic wave propagation and heat conduction, but not other relevant physics such as water vaporization and mass transfer. Such physical changes are particularly noteworthy during the intense heat generation associated with microwave heating. In this paper, a numerical model was created that integrates microwave heating with water vapor generation and transport by using porous media assumptions in the tissue domain. The heating physics of the water vapor model was validated through temperature measurements taken at locations 5, 10, and 20 mm away from the heating zone of the microwave antenna in homogenized ex vivo bovine liver setup. Cross-sectional area of water vapor transport was validated through intraprocedural computed tomography (CT) during microwave ablations in homogenized ex vivo bovine liver. Iso-density contours from CT images were compared to vapor concentration contours from the numerical model at intermittent time points using the Jaccard index. In general, there was an improving correlation in ablation size dimensions as the ablation procedure proceeded, with a Jaccard index of 0.27, 0.49, 0.61, 0.67, and 0.69 at 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 min, respectively. This study demonstrates the feasibility and validity of incorporating water vapor concentration into thermal ablation simulations and validating such models experimentally.
Keywords :
biochemistry; biological fluid dynamics; biological tissues; biothermics; biotransport; computerised tomography; correlation methods; electromagnetic wave propagation; flow simulation; flow through porous media; geometry; heat conduction; liver; mass transfer; medical computing; microwave antennas; microwave heating; molecular biophysics; partial differential equations; pattern matching; physiological models; radiation therapy; statistical analysis; temperature measurement; vaporisation; water; CT image; H2O; Jaccard index; ablation growth analysis; ablation size dimension correlation; clinical treatment planning; computer-aided design; distance 10 mm; distance 20 mm; distance 5 mm; electromagnetic wave propagation; heat conduction; heating physics; homogenized ex vivo bovine liver setup; intense heat generation; intermittent time point; internal vaporization; intraprocedural computed tomography; isodensity contour comparison; mass transfer; microwave ablation modeling; microwave ablation validation; microwave antenna heating zone; microwave heating; numerical simulation; physical change; porous media assumption; temperature measurement; thermal ablation simulation validation; time 1 min to 5 min; tissue domain; treatment device design; vapor concentration contour; water vapor concentration; water vapor generation; water vapor model; water vapor transport cross-sectional area; water vaporization; Computed tomography; Electromagnetic heating; Liver; Microwave antennas; Microwave imaging; Numerical models; Water heating; Computational Modeling; Computational modeling; Heat Transfer; Microwave; Thermal Ablation; heat transfer; microwave; thermal ablation;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2014.2363173