DocumentCode
1211185
Title
A Computational Model of the Electromagnetic Heating of Biological Tissue with Application to Hyperthermic Cancer Therapy
Author
Van Den Berg, Peter M. ; de Hoop, A.T. ; Segal, A. ; Praagman, N.
Author_Institution
Laboratory of Electromagnetic Research, Department of Electrical Engineering, Delft University of Technology
Issue
12
fYear
1983
Firstpage
797
Lastpage
805
Abstract
To investigate the potentialities of hyperthermia as a cancer therapy, computer simulations have been performed. This simulation consists of two tuccessive steps. First, the heat generated in a distribution of biological tissue when irradiated by a source of electromagnetic radiation is computed. The mathematical tool for determining the disbution of generated heat is the domain-integral-equation technique. This technique enables us to determine in a body with arbitrary distribution of permittivity and conductivity the electromagnetic field due to prescribed sources. The integral equation is solved numerically by an iterative minimization of the integrated square error. From the computed distribution of generated heat, the temperature distribution follows by solving numerically the pertaining heat transfer problem. The relevant differential equation together with initial and boundary conditions is solved numerically using a finite-element technique in space and a finite-difference technique in time. Numerical results pertaining to the temperature distribution in a model of the human pelvis are presented.
Keywords
Biological system modeling; Biological tissues; Biology computing; Cancer; Computational modeling; Electromagnetic heating; Electromagnetic modeling; Electromagnetic radiation; Hyperthermia; Medical treatment; Biomedical Engineering; Computers; Electromagnetics; Humans; Hyperthermia, Induced; Mathematics; Models, Biological; Neoplasms; Pelvic Neoplasms;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.1983.325081
Filename
4121557
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