Abstract

BackgroundOne recent area of cancer research is irreversible electroporation (IRE). Irreversible electroporation is a minimally invasive procedure where needle electrodes are inserted into the body to ablate tumor cells with electricity. The aim of this paper is to propose a mathematical model that incorporates a tissue’s conductivity increasing more in the direction of the electrical field as this has been shown to occur in experiments.MethodIt was necessary to mathematically derive a valid form of the conductivity tensor such that it is dependent on the electrical field direction and can be easily implemented into numerical software. The derivation of a conductivity tensor that can take arbitrary functions for the conductivity in the directions tangent and normal to the electrical field is the main contribution of this paper. Numerical simulations were performed for isotropic-varying and anisotropic-varying conductivities to evaluate the importance of including the electrical field’s direction in the formulation for conductivity.ResultsBy starting from previously published experimental results, this paper derived a general formulation for an anistropic-varying tensor for implementation into irreversible electroporation modeling software. The anistropic-varying tensor formulation allows the conductivity to take into consideration both electrical field direction and magnitude, as opposed to previous published works that only took into account electrical field magnitude.The anisotropic formulation predicts roughly a five percent decrease in ablation size for the monopolar simulation and approximately a ten percent decrease in ablation size for the bipolar simulations. This is a positive result as previously reported results found the isotropic formulation to overpredict ablation size for both monopolar and bipolar simulations. Furthermore, it was also reported that the isotropic formulation overpredicts the ablation size more for the bipolar case than the monopolar case. Thus, our results are following the experimental trend by having a larger percentage change in volume for the bipolar case than the monopolar case.ConclusionsThe predicted volume of ablated cells decreased, and could be a possible explanation for the slight over-prediction seen by isotropic-varying formulations.

Highlights

  • One recent area of cancer research is irreversible electroporation (IRE)

  • By starting from previously published experimental results, this paper derived a general formulation for an anistropic-varying tensor for implementation into irreversible electroporation modeling software

  • The anistropic-varying tensor formulation allows the conductivity to take into consideration both electrical field direction and magnitude, as opposed to previous published works that only took into account electrical field magnitude

Read more

Summary

Introduction

One recent area of cancer research is irreversible electroporation (IRE). Irreversible electroporation is a minimally invasive procedure where needle electrodes are inserted into the body to ablate tumor cells with electricity. A strong enough electrical field can irreversibly damage the cell’s membrane and cause cell death. This process is called irreversible electroproation (IRE), and has gained interest as a possible tumor ablation method [2]. The critical value depends on various factors such as tissue type, tumor stage, electrode configuration and size, and the direction of the applied electric field. The success of an IRE-based therapy for tumors relies on this critical value and knowledge about the optimal configuration and size of the electrodes as well as the applied voltage needed to completely ablate the tumor while minimizing the damage to healthy tissue is relevant to clinicians

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.