Polymer coated fiber Bragg grating thermometry for microwave hyperthermia.

Med Phys

Intelligent Optical Systems, Inc., 2520 W 237th Street, Torrance, California 90505-5217, USA.

Published: September 2010

Purpose: Measuring tissue temperature distribution during electromagnetically induced hyperthermia (HT) is challenging. High resistance thermistors with nonmetallic leads have been used successfully in commercial HT systems for about three decades. The single 1 mm thick temperature sensing element is mechanically moved to measure tissue temperature distributions. By employing a single thermometry probe containing a fixed linear sensor array temperature, distributions during therapy can be measured with greater ease. While the first attempts to use fiber Bragg grating (FBG) technology to obtain multiple temperature points along a single fiber have been reported, improvement in the detection system's stability were needed for clinical applications. The FBG temperature sensing system described here has a very high temporal stability detection system and an order of magnitude faster readout than commercial systems. It is shown to be suitable for multiple point fiber thermometry during microwave hyperthermia when compared to conventional mechanically scanning probe HT thermometry.

Methods: A polymer coated fiber Bragg grating (PFBG) technology is described that provides a number of FBG thermometry locations along the length of a single optical fiber. The PFBG probe developed is tested under simulated microwave hyperthermia treatment to a tissue equivalent phantom. Two temperature probes, the multiple PFBG sensor and the Bowman probe, placed symmetrically with respect to a microwave antenna in a tissue phantom are subjected to microwave hyperthermia. Measurements are made at start of HT and 85 min later, when a 6 degrees C increase in temperature is registered by both probes, as is typical in clinical HT therapy. The optical fiber multipoint thermometry probe performs highly stable, real-time thermometry updating each multipoint thermometry scan over a 5 cm length every 2 s. Bowman probe measurements are acquired simultaneously for comparison. In addition, the PFBG sensor's detection system drift over 10 h is measured separately to evaluate system stability for clinical applications.

Results: The temperature profiles measured by the two probes simultaneously under microwave HT are in good agreement showing mean differences of 0.25 degrees C. The stability of the detection system is better than 0.3 degrees C with response times of the PFBG sensor system of 2 s for each scan over ten points.

Conclusions: The single fixed multipoint fiber thermometry capability compares favorably with the scanning Bowman probe data. This offers an enabling alternative to either scanning or bundled single point temperature probes for distributed thermometry in clinical applications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2933252PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.3463382DOI Listing

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