Title :
Improvement of a technique for localization of steel needles in humans using a SQUID magnetometer
Author :
Barbosa, Carlos Hall ; Monteiro, Elisabeth Costa ; Lima, Eduardo Andrade ; Santos, Samantha Fonseca ; Cavalcanti, Eric Gama ; Ribeiro, Paulo Costa
Author_Institution :
Pontificia Univ. Catolica do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
fDate :
3/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A technique was previously developed, based on magnetic field measurements, to localize hypodermic and sewing needles lost in the human body, with the purpose of surgical extraction. The measurements are performed using a SQUID magnetometer, which detects the magnetic field associated with the remanent magnetization of the needle. The technique allowed easy surgical localization of the needles with good precision in all six clinical cases studied so far. The procedure greatly decreases the surgery time for foreign body extraction, and also reduces the generally high odds of failure. This paper presents an improvement of the original algorithm, which is now independent of any constant magnetic field component, thus overcoming the main experimental difficulty usually found, namely that a SQUID system does not measure absolute fields
Keywords :
SQUID magnetometers; biomagnetism; magnetic field measurement; SQUID magnetometer; clinical technique; foreign body extraction; human body; hypodermic needle; localization algorithm; magnetic field measurement; remanent magnetization; sewing needle; steel needle; surgery; Humans; Magnetic field measurement; Magnetic sensors; Magnetic separation; Magnetization; Needles; Performance evaluation; SQUID magnetometers; Steel; Surgery;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on