
Investigation of Microwave Ablation Process in Sweet Potatoes as Substitute Liver
Aufsatz

Zusammenfassung
The microwave ablation technique to destroy cancer tissues in liver is practiced clinically
and is the subject of ongoing research, e.g., ablation monitoring. For studies, liver tissue from cattle
or pigs is often used as a substitute material. In this work, sweet potato is presented as an alternative
material for microwave ablation experiments in liver due to similar material properties. Sweet
potatoes as a substitute for liver have the advantages of better handling, easy procurement and
stable material properties over time for microwave ablation experiments. The dielectric constant and
electrical conductivity of sweet potato are characterized for temperature variation with the help of
high-temperature dielectric probe. Furthermore, a test setup is presented for microwave ablation
experiments in which a bowtie slot antenna matched to sweet potato is placed on its surface to
directly receive the microwave power from a self-developed microwave applicator inserted into a
sweet potato 4 cm below the surface antenna. A high-power source was used to excite the microwave
powers up to 80 W and a spectrum analyzer was used to measure the signal received by the surface
antenna. The experiments were performed in an anechoic chamber for safety reasons. Power at 50W
and 80 W was stimulated for a maximum of 600 s at the 2.45 GHz ISM band in different sweet potato
experiments. A correlation is found between the power received by the surface antenna and rise
of temperature inside sweet potato; relative received power drops from 1 at 76 C to 0.6 at 88 C
(max. temperature) represents a 40% relative change in a 50 W microwave ablation experiment.
The received power envelope at the surface antenna is between 10 mW and 32 mW during 50W
microwave ablation. Other important results for 10 min, 80 W microwave ablation include: a
maximum ablation zone short axis diameter of 4.5 cm and a maximum ablation temperature reached
at 99 C, 3 mm away from the applicator’s slot. The results are compared with the state of the art in
microwave ablation in animal liver. The dielectric constant and electrical conductivity evolution of
sweet potato with rising temperature is comparable to animal liver in 50–60 C range. The reflection
loss of self-developed applicator in sweet potato is below 15 dB which is equal to reflection loss in
liver experiments for 600 s. The temperature rise for the first 90 s in sweet potato is 76 C as compared
to 73 C in liver with 50 W microwave ablation. Similarly, with 80–75 W microwave ablation, for the
first 60 s, the temperature is 98 C in sweet potato as compared to 100 C in liver. The ablation zone
short-axis diameter after 600 s is 3.3 cm for 50 W microwave ablation in sweet potato as compared to
3.5 cm for 30 W microwave ablation in liver. The reasons for difference in microwave ablation results
in sweet potato and animal liver are discussed. This is the first study to directly receive a signal from
microwave applicator during a microwave ablation process with the help of a surface antenna. The
work can be extended to multiple array antennas for microwave ablation monitoring.
Schlagworte
liver
microwave ablation
sweet potato
temperature monitoring
microwave ablation
sweet potato
temperature monitoring
DDC-Klassifikation
610 Medizin und Gesundheit
Erschienen in
Sensors. MDPI; Basel (2021). Vol. 21, H. 11, 3894, 17 S.. eISSN: 1424-8220, DOI: 10.3390/s21113894
Einrichtung
Fachbereich Ingenieurwesen
Link zur Veröffentlichung
Sammlungen
- Publikationen [130]
BibTeX
@article{Khan2021,
author={Khan, Muhammad Saad and Hawlitzki, Michael and Mofrad Taheri, Shadan and Rose, Georg and Schweizer, Bernd and Brensing, Andreas},
title={Investigation of Microwave Ablation Process in Sweet Potatoes as Substitute Liver},
journal={Sensors},
volume={Vol. 21},
number={H. 11},
pages={17 S.},
month={06},
year={2021},
publisher={MDPI; Basel},
school={Hochschule RheinMain, Wiesbaden},
url={https://hlbrm.pur.hebis.de/xmlui/handle/123456789/114},
doi={10.25716/pur-92}
}