4.5 Article

Optical fiber sensors-based temperature distribution measurement in ex vivo radiofrequency ablation with submillimeter resolution

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL OPTICS
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.19.11.117004

Keywords

fiber optic sensors; distributed temperature sensor; radiofrequency thermal ablation; ex vivo liver tissue; Rayleigh backscattering

Funding

  1. Marie Curie IEF action [MC-IEF-299985]
  2. Ordine degli Ingegneri della Provincia di Pavia
  3. Fondazione per la Cura Mini-Invasiva dei Tumori

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Radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFTA) induces a high-temperature field in a biological tissue having steep spatial (up to 6 degrees C/mm) and temporal (up to 1 degrees C/s) gradients. Applied in cancer care, RFTA produces a localized heating, cytotoxic for tumor cells, and is able to treat tumors with sizes up to 3 to 5 cm in diameter. The online measurement of temperature distribution at the RFTA point of care has been previously carried out with miniature thermocouples and optical fiber sensors, which exhibit problems of size, alteration of RFTA pattern, hysteresis, and sensor density worse than 1 sensor/cm. In this work, we apply a distributed temperature sensor (DTS) with a submillimeter spatial resolution for the monitoring of RFTA in porcine liver tissue. The DTS demodulates the chaotic Rayleigh backscattering pattern with an interferometric setup to obtain the real-time temperature distribution. A measurement chamber has been set up with the fiber crossing the tissue along different diameters. Several experiments have been carried out measuring the space-time evolution of temperature during RFTA. The present work showcases the temperature monitoring in RFTA with an unprecedented spatial resolution and is exportable to in vivo measurement; the acquired data can be particularly useful for the validation of RFTA computational models. (C) 2014 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)

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