DocumentCode :
3704467
Title :
A novel compact microwave radiometric sensor to noninvasively track deep tissue thermal profiles
Author :
Paolo F. Maccarini;Ankur Shah;Sharmila Y. Palani;Donald V. Pearce;Madhurima Vardhan;Paul R. Stauffer;Dario B. Rodrigues;Sara Salahi;Tiago R. Oliveira;Doug Reudink;Brent W. Snow
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC - USA
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
690
Lastpage :
693
Abstract :
Drawing from space technology to measure star temperature, we developed a noninvasive sensor to passively track thermal profiles in tissues well below the skin (>5cm). Ultra-low noise amplifiers combined with ultralow-loss switches in the 1-2GHz band produce a high sensitivity multiband microwave radiometer. Due to the complex multilayer anatomy of human head, multiple sensing bands are needed to reconstruct the temperature of deep brain tissue. This is achieved by using a digitally controlled filter bank. To study its accuracy, the sensor was calibrated and tested in a multilayer phantom model of the human head with differential scalp and brain temperatures. Results of phantom testing showed that calculated radiometric equivalent brain temperature agreed within 0.4°C of measured temperature when circulating homogenized brain phantom was lowered 10°C and returned to original temperature (37°C), while scalp was maintained constant over a 4.6-hour experiment. Feasibility of clinical monitoring was assessed in a pediatric patient during a hypothermic heart surgery. Over the 2-hour surgery, the radiometric sensor tracked within 1°C of rectal and nasopharynx temperatures, except during rapid cooldown and heatup periods when brain temperature deviated 2-4°C from slower responding core temperature surrogates. In summary, the sensor demonstrated long term stability and sensitivity sufficient for accurate monitoring of volume average brain temperature to assist rapid recovery from hypothermic surgical procedures.
Keywords :
"Temperature measurement","Temperature sensors","Microwave radiometry","Scalp","Surgery","Probes","Brain modeling"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Microwave Conference (EuMC), 2015 European
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/EuMC.2015.7345857
Filename :
7345857
Link To Document :
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