Title :
Differential and directional effects of perfusion on electrical and thermal conductivities in liver
Author :
Podhajsky, Ronald J. ; Yi, Ming ; Mahajan, Roop L.
Author_Institution :
Covidien Energy-Based Devices, Boulder, CO, USA
Abstract :
Two different measurement probes - an electrical probe and a thermal conductivity probe - were designed, fabricated, calibrated, and used in experimental studies on a pig liver model that was designed to control perfusion rates. These probes were fabricated by photolithography and mounted in 1.5-mm diameter catheters. We measured the local impedance and thermal conductivity, respectively, of the artificially perfused liver at different flow rates and, by rotating the probes, in different directions. The results show that both the local electrical conductivity and the thermal conductivity varied location to location, that thermal conductivity increased with decreased distance to large blood vessels, and that significant directional differences exist in both electrical and thermal conductivities. Measurements at different perfusion rates demonstrated that both the local electrical and local thermal conductivities increased linearly with the square root of perfusion rate. These correlations may be of great value to many energy-based biomedical applications.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biothermics; blood flow measurement; blood vessels; catheters; electrical conductivity; haemorheology; liver; thermal conductivity; artificially perfused liver; blood vessels; catheters; electrical conductivity probe; energy-based biomedical applications; measurement probe fabrication; perfusion rate control; perfusion rate measurement; photolithography; size 1.5 mm; thermal conductivity probe; Animals; Biomedical Engineering; Calibration; Electric Conductivity; Electrophysiology; Equipment Design; Kinetics; Liver; Perfusion; Swine; Temperature; Thermal Conductivity; Transducers; Venae Cavae;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2009. EMBC 2009. Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3296-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1557-170X
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2009.5334299