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Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment

We produced an anatomically and dielectrically realistic phantom of the axillary region to enable the experimental assessment of Axillary Lymph Node (ALN) imaging using microwave imaging technology. We segmented a thoracic Computed Tomography (CT) scan and created a computer-aided designed file cont...

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Autores principales: Savazzi, Matteo, Abedi, Soroush, Ištuk, Niko, Joachimowicz, Nadine, Roussel, Hélène, Porter, Emily, O’Halloran, Martin, Costa, Jorge R., Fernandes, Carlos A., Felício, João M., Conceição, Raquel C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7506727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32887340
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20174968
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author Savazzi, Matteo
Abedi, Soroush
Ištuk, Niko
Joachimowicz, Nadine
Roussel, Hélène
Porter, Emily
O’Halloran, Martin
Costa, Jorge R.
Fernandes, Carlos A.
Felício, João M.
Conceição, Raquel C.
author_facet Savazzi, Matteo
Abedi, Soroush
Ištuk, Niko
Joachimowicz, Nadine
Roussel, Hélène
Porter, Emily
O’Halloran, Martin
Costa, Jorge R.
Fernandes, Carlos A.
Felício, João M.
Conceição, Raquel C.
author_sort Savazzi, Matteo
collection PubMed
description We produced an anatomically and dielectrically realistic phantom of the axillary region to enable the experimental assessment of Axillary Lymph Node (ALN) imaging using microwave imaging technology. We segmented a thoracic Computed Tomography (CT) scan and created a computer-aided designed file containing the anatomical configuration of the axillary region. The phantom comprises five 3D-printed parts representing the main tissues of interest of the axillary region for the purpose of microwave imaging: fat, muscle, bone, ALNs, and lung. The phantom allows the experimental assessment of multiple anatomical configurations, by including ALNs of different size, shape, and number in several locations. Except for the bone mimicking organ, which is made of solid conductive polymer, we 3D-printed cavities to represent the fat, muscle, ALN, and lung and filled them with appropriate tissue-mimicking liquids. Existing studies about complex permittivity of ALNs have reported limitations. To address these, we measured the complex permittivity of both human and animal lymph nodes using the standard open-ended coaxial-probe technique, over the 0.5 GHz–8.5 GHz frequency band, thus extending current knowledge on dielectric properties of ALNs. Lastly, we numerically evaluated the effect of the polymer which constitutes the cavities of the phantom and compared it to the realistic axillary region. The results showed a maximum difference of 7 dB at 4 GHz in the electric field magnitude coupled to the tissues and a maximum of 10 dB difference in the ALN response. Our results showed that the phantom is a good representation of the axillary region and a viable tool for pre-clinical assessment of microwave imaging technology.
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spelling pubmed-75067272020-09-26 Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment Savazzi, Matteo Abedi, Soroush Ištuk, Niko Joachimowicz, Nadine Roussel, Hélène Porter, Emily O’Halloran, Martin Costa, Jorge R. Fernandes, Carlos A. Felício, João M. Conceição, Raquel C. Sensors (Basel) Article We produced an anatomically and dielectrically realistic phantom of the axillary region to enable the experimental assessment of Axillary Lymph Node (ALN) imaging using microwave imaging technology. We segmented a thoracic Computed Tomography (CT) scan and created a computer-aided designed file containing the anatomical configuration of the axillary region. The phantom comprises five 3D-printed parts representing the main tissues of interest of the axillary region for the purpose of microwave imaging: fat, muscle, bone, ALNs, and lung. The phantom allows the experimental assessment of multiple anatomical configurations, by including ALNs of different size, shape, and number in several locations. Except for the bone mimicking organ, which is made of solid conductive polymer, we 3D-printed cavities to represent the fat, muscle, ALN, and lung and filled them with appropriate tissue-mimicking liquids. Existing studies about complex permittivity of ALNs have reported limitations. To address these, we measured the complex permittivity of both human and animal lymph nodes using the standard open-ended coaxial-probe technique, over the 0.5 GHz–8.5 GHz frequency band, thus extending current knowledge on dielectric properties of ALNs. Lastly, we numerically evaluated the effect of the polymer which constitutes the cavities of the phantom and compared it to the realistic axillary region. The results showed a maximum difference of 7 dB at 4 GHz in the electric field magnitude coupled to the tissues and a maximum of 10 dB difference in the ALN response. Our results showed that the phantom is a good representation of the axillary region and a viable tool for pre-clinical assessment of microwave imaging technology. MDPI 2020-09-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7506727/ /pubmed/32887340 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20174968 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Savazzi, Matteo
Abedi, Soroush
Ištuk, Niko
Joachimowicz, Nadine
Roussel, Hélène
Porter, Emily
O’Halloran, Martin
Costa, Jorge R.
Fernandes, Carlos A.
Felício, João M.
Conceição, Raquel C.
Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment
title Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment
title_full Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment
title_fullStr Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment
title_short Development of an Anthropomorphic Phantom of the Axillary Region for Microwave Imaging Assessment
title_sort development of an anthropomorphic phantom of the axillary region for microwave imaging assessment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7506727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32887340
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20174968
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