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Feasibility of Temperature Control by Electrical Impedance Tomography in Hyperthermia.

Redi PoniEsra NeufeldMyles CapstickStephan B BodisTheodoros SamarasNiels Kuster
Published in: Cancers (2021)
We present a simulation study investigating the feasibility of electrical impedance tomography (EIT) as a low cost, noninvasive technique for hyperthermia (HT) treatment monitoring and adaptation. Temperature rise in tissues leads to perfusion and tissue conductivity changes that can be reconstructed in 3D by EIT to noninvasively map temperature and perfusion. In this study, we developed reconstruction methods and investigated the achievable accuracy of EIT by simulating HT treatmentlike scenarios, using detailed anatomical models with heterogeneous conductivity distributions. The impact of the size and location of the heated region, the voltage measurement signal-to-noise ratio, and the reference model personalization and accuracy were studied. Results showed that by introducing an iterative reconstruction approach, combined with adaptive prior regions and tissue-dependent penalties, planning-based reference models, measurement-based reweighting, and physics-based constraints, it is possible to map conductivity-changes throughout the heated domain, with an accuracy of around 5% and cm-scale spatial resolution. An initial exploration of the use of multifrequency EIT to separate temperature and perfusion effects yielded promising results, indicating that temperature reconstruction accuracy can be in the order of 1 ∘C. Our results suggest that EIT can provide valuable real-time HT monitoring capabilities. Experimental confirmation in real-world conditions is the next step.
Keyphrases
  • low cost
  • contrast enhanced
  • gene expression
  • climate change
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • magnetic resonance
  • high resolution
  • single molecule
  • high density
  • combination therapy