Title :
Feasibility of ultrasound hyperthermia with waveguide interstitial applicator
Author :
Jarosz, Boguslaw J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Carleton Univ., Ottawa, Ont., Canada
Abstract :
Interstitial and intracavitary ultrasonic hyperthermia applicators facilitate well-controlled power deposition in tissues. In this paper, analysis of temperature elevation and experimental results in tissue phantom, animal tissue in vivo and animal tissue in vitro are presented for a waveguide applicator intended for treatment of brain tumors. It consisted of a G18 hypodermic needle attached via a conical velocity transformer to a 12.7-mm-diameter piezoelectric disk operated at 1.0 MHz. The axial acoustic pressure distribution had a standing-wave pattern with the four cycles/cm spatial periodicity. This periodicity was absent in the temperature distribution in tissue phantoms. The simulations based on a solution to the effective heat conductivity equation indicated that the hyperthermic range can be reached within a 4- and a 10-mm radius around the applicator for a 21- and a 60-mm sample diameters, respectively, with reasonable input power. The first number corresponded closely to the 5-mm radius observed in porcine brain in vivo and the second one came close to the 9-mm radius in porcine brain in vitro. The presented results demonstrate the potential of the ultrasound waveguide interstitial applicator for hyperthermia of small volume tumors.
Keywords :
acoustic waveguides; biomedical equipment; biomedical ultrasonics; brain; hyperthermia; radiation therapy; temperature distribution; 1.0 MHz; 4 to 60 mm; G18 hypodermic needle; animal tissue in vitro; animal tissue in vivo; brain tumors treatment; conical velocity transformer; effective heat conductivity equation; intracavitary ultrasonic hyperthermia; piezoelectric disk; porcine brain; standing-wave pattern; temperature elevation; tissue phantom; tissues; ultrasound hyperthermia feasibility; waveguide interstitial applicator; well-controlled power deposition; Acoustic waveguides; Animals; Applicators; Hyperthermia; Imaging phantoms; In vitro; In vivo; Neoplasms; Temperature; Ultrasonic imaging; Animals; Body Temperature Regulation; Brain; Brain Neoplasms; Cerebrovascular Circulation; Equipment Design; Feasibility Studies; Fourier Analysis; Microcomputers; Needles; Periodicity; Phantoms, Imaging; Pressure; Random Allocation; Reference Values; Swine; Temperature; Transducers; Ultrasonic Therapy;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on