Background: Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a nonionizing imaging technique for real-time imaging of ventilation of patients with respiratory distress. Cross-sectional dynamic images are formed by reconstructing the conductivity distribution from measured voltage data arising from applied alternating currents on electrodes placed circumferentially around the chest. Since the conductivity of lung tissue depends on air content, blood flow, and the presence of pathology, the dynamic images provide regional information about ventilation, pulsatile perfusion, and abnormalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a non-invasive medical imaging technique in which images of the conductivity in a region of interest in the body are computed from measurements of voltages on electrodes arising from low-frequency, low-amplitude applied currents. Mathematically, the inverse conductivity problem is nonlinear and ill-posed, and the reconstructions have characteristically low spatial resolution. One approach to improve the spatial resolution of EIT images is to include anatomically and physiologically-based prior information in the reconstruction algorithm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) is under fast development, the present paper is a review of some procedures that are contributing to improve spatial resolution and material properties accuracy, admitivitty or impeditivity accuracy. A review of EIT medical applications is presented and they were classified into three broad categories: ARDS patients, obstructive lung diseases and perioperative patients. The use of absolute EIT image may enable the assessment of absolute lung volume, which may significantly improve the clinical acceptance of EIT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe design and performance of the ACE1 (Active Complex Electrode) electrical impedance tomography system for single-ended phasic voltage measurements is presented. The design of the hardware and calibration procedures allow for reconstruction of conductivity and permittivity images. Phase measurement is achieved with the ACE1 active electrode circuit which measures the amplitude and phase of the voltage and the applied current at the location at which current is injected into the body.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: We recently described how spontaneous effort during mechanical ventilation can cause "pendelluft," that is, displacement of gas from nondependent (more recruited) lung to dependent (less recruited) lung during early inspiration. Such transfer depends on the coexistence of more recruited (source) liquid-like lung regions together with less recruited (target) solid-like lung regions. Pendelluft may improve gas exchange, but because of tidal recruitment, it may also contribute to injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel direct D-bar reconstruction algorithm is presented for reconstructing a complex conductivity distribution from 2-D EIT data. The method is applied to simulated data and archival human chest data. Permittivity reconstructions with the aforementioned method and conductivity reconstructions with the previously existing nonlinear D-bar method for real-valued conductivities depicting ventilation and perfusion in the human chest are presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The compliance for tooth cavity preparations is not yet fully described in the literature. Thus, the objectives were to present a finite element (FE) method for calculating compliance and to apply this to peak shrinkage stress regions in model cavities restored with resin-composite.
Methods: Three groups of FE-models were created, with all materials considered linear, homogeneous, elastic and isotropic: (a) a pair of butt-joint bonded cubic prisms (dentin/resin-composite), with dentin of known compliance (0.
Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is an imaging technique that attempts to reconstruct the impedance distribution inside an object from the impedance between electrodes placed on the object surface. The EIT reconstruction problem can be approached as a nonlinear nonconvex optimization problem in which one tries to maximize the matching between a simulated impedance problem and the observed data. This nonlinear optimization problem is often ill-posed, and not very suited to methods that evaluate derivatives of the objective function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To purpose a method for predicting the shrinkage stress development in the adhesive layer of resin-composite cylinders that shrink bonded to a single flat surface, by measuring the deflection of a glass coverslip caused by the shrinkage of the bonded cylinders. The correlation between the volume of the bonded resin-composite and the stress-peak was also investigated.
Methods: A glass coverslip deflection caused by the shrinkage of a bonded resin-composite cylinder (diameter: d=8 mm, 4 mm, or 2 mm, height: h=4 mm, 2 mm, 1 mm, or 0.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
August 2012
The EIT reconstruction problem is approached as an optimization problem where the difference between a simulated impedance domain and the observed one is minimized. This optimization problem is often solved by Simulated Annealing (SA), but at a large computational cost due to the expensive evaluation process of the objective function. We propose here, a variation of SA applied to EIT where the objective function is evaluated only partially, while ensuring upper boundaries on the deviation on the behavior of the modified SA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne of the electrical impedance tomography objectives is to estimate the electrical resistivity distribution in a domain based only on electrical potential measurements at its boundary generated by an imposed electrical current distribution into the boundary. One of the methods used in dynamic estimation is the Kalman filter. In biomedical applications, the random walk model is frequently used as evolution model and, under this conditions, poor tracking ability of the extended Kalman filter (EKF) is achieved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose Of Review: Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a noninvasive, radiation-free monitoring tool that allows real-time imaging of ventilation. The purpose of this article is to discuss the fundamentals of EIT and to review the use of EIT in critical care patients.
Recent Findings: In addition to its established role in describing the distribution of alveolar ventilation, EIT has been shown to be a useful tool to detect lung collapse and monitor lung recruitment, both regionally and on a global basis.
Upper premolars restored with endodontic posts present a high incidence of vertical root fracture (VRF). Two hypotheses were tested: (1) the smaller mesiodistal diameter favors stress concentration in the root and (2) the lack of an effective bonding between root and post increases the risk of VRF. Using finite element analysis, maximum principal stress was analyzed in 3-dimensional intact upper second premolar models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Pneumothorax is a frequent complication during mechanical ventilation. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a noninvasive tool that allows real-time imaging of regional ventilation. The purpose of this study was to 1) identify characteristic changes in the EIT signals associated with pneumothoraces; 2) develop and fine-tune an algorithm for their automatic detection; and 3) prospectively evaluate this algorithm for its sensitivity and specificity in detecting pneumothoraces in real time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrical impedance tomography is a technique to estimate the impedance distribution within a domain, based on measurements on its boundary. In other words, given the mathematical model of the domain, its geometry and boundary conditions, a nonlinear inverse problem of estimating the electric impedance distribution can be solved. Several impedance estimation algorithms have been proposed to solve this problem.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Evaluate the effect of testing system compliance on polymerization stress and stress distribution of composites.
Methods: Composites tested were Filtek Z250 (FZ), Herculite (HL), Tetric Ceram (TC), Helio Fill-AP (HF) and Heliomolar (HM). Stress was determined in 1-mm thick specimens, inserted between two rods of either poly(methyl methacrylate), PMMA, or glass.
Finite element analysis (FEA) utilizing models with different levels of complexity are found in the literature to study the tendency to vertical root fracture caused by post intrusion ("wedge effect"). The objective of this investigation was to verify if some simplifications used in bi-dimensional FEA models are acceptable regarding the analysis of stresses caused by wedge effect. Three plane strain (PS) and two axisymmetric (Axi) models were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: This study aimed at comparing the stress distribution in shear and micro-shear test set-ups using finite element analysis, and suggesting some parameter standardization that might have important influence on the results.
Methods: Two-dimensional plane strain finite element analysis was performed using MSCPatran and MSCMarc softwares. Model configurations were based on published experimental shear and micro-shear test set-ups and material properties were assumed to be isotropic, homogeneous and linear-elastic.
Objectives: Verify the influence of specimen dimensions on composite shrinkage stress in testing systems of known compliance and in situations where axial strain of bonding substrates was suppressed. Stress distribution was evaluated using finite element analysis (FEA).
Methods: A chemically activated composite (Bisfill 2B, Bisco) was inserted between the flat surfaces of two glass rods (2, 4 or 6mm diameter, D) attached to a universal testing machine.