DocumentCode
1218487
Title
Dielectrc Polarization of Animal Lung at Radio Frequencies
Author
Surowiec, Andrew J. ; Stuchly, Stanislaw S. ; Keaney, Marilyn ; Swarup, Arvind
Author_Institution
Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Ottawa
Issue
1
fYear
1987
Firstpage
62
Lastpage
67
Abstract
Dielectric properties of the inflated and deflated fceline lung in vivo were investigated at frequencies from 10 kHz to 100 MHz. A computer-controlled network analyzer and a multiring capacitive sensor were employed. It was found that in the frequency range investigated, both the dielectric constant and the conductivity of the deflated lung were higher than those of the inflated one. The analysis of the experimental data was performed using two approaches: the loss-tangent method and the curve-fitting computer program called STEPIT. It was found that in the middle band of frequencies for both inflated and deflated states of the lung, the dielectric response mainly reflects the membrane polarization of the capillary erythrocytes with possible contributions of other components, e.g., the pulmonary microphages. The dielectric relaxation time for the capillary erythrocytes in the lung is similar to that for the packed cells, which is much longer than for the erythrocytes at physiological concentrations. The dielectric parameters at low frequencies obtained using the STEPIT program differ significantly between the inflated and deflated lung. The observed dielectric data reflect at least two overlapping dispersions: of lung capillary erythrocytes and of cellular structures forming the alveoli.
Keywords
Animals; Capacitive sensors; Computer networks; Conductivity; Dielectric constant; In vivo; Lungs; Performance analysis; Polarization; Radio frequency; Animals; Cats; Electromagnetic Fields; Electromagnetics; Lung; Respiration;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.1987.326016
Filename
4122434
Link To Document