AI Article Synopsis

  • Microwave ablation (MWA) uses electromagnetic waves to heat and destroy tumor cells while sparing healthy tissue, necessitating mathematical models to analyze heat distribution before treatment.
  • The research focuses on implementing a 3D vector finite element method to simulate heat absorption in the liver, employing Nedelec elements to address real-world electromagnetic problems.
  • By strategically placing four antennas to heat the tumor uniformly, the study found a 95.5% tumor cell kill rate with limited damage to surrounding tissue, while examining temperature distribution and tissue contraction using a bio-heat equation model.

Article Abstract

Microwave ablation (MWA) is a cancer thermal ablation treatment that uses electromagnetic waves to generate heat within the tissue. The goal of this treatment is to eliminate tumor cells while leaving healthy cells unharmed. During MWA, excess heat generation can kill healthy cells. Hence, mathematical models and numerical techniques are required to analyze the heat distribution in the tissue before the treatment. The aim of this research is to explain the implementation of the 3D vector finite element method in a wave propagation model that simulates the specific absorption rate in the liver. The 3D Nedelec elements from H(curl; Ω) space are used to discretize the wave propagation model, and this implementation is helpful in solving many real-world problems that involve electromagnetic propagation with perfect conducting and absorbing boundary conditions. One of the difficulties in ablation treatment is creating a large ablation zone for a large tumor (diameter greater than 3 cm) in a short period of time with minimum damage to the surrounding tissue. This article addresses the aforementioned issue by introducing four antennas into the different places of the tumor sequentially and producing heat uniformly over the tumor. The results demonstrated that 95.5% of the tumor cells were killed with minimal damage to the healthy cells when the heating time was increased to 4 minutes at each position. Subsequently, we studied the temperature distribution and localised tissue contraction in the tissue using the three-dimensional bio-heat equation and temperature-time dependent model, respectively. The local tissue contraction is measured at arbitrary points in the domain and is more noticeable at temperatures higher than 102°C. The thermal damage in the liver during MWA treatment is investigated using the three-state cell death model. The system of partial differential equations is solved numerically due to the complex geometry of the domain, and the results are compared with experimental data to validate the models and parameters.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10381062PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0289262PLOS

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