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"Finite element" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 3D bioheat transfer mapping reveals nanomagnetic particles effectiveness in radiofrequency hyperthermia breast cancer treatment comparing to experimental study Kavousi M; Saadatmand E; Masoumbeigi M; Mahdavi R; Riyahi Alam N; 39557504
PHYSICS
2 Investigation of Macroscopic Mechanical Behavior of Magnetorheological Elastomers under Shear Deformation Using Microscale Representative Volume Element Approach Abdollahi I; Sedaghati R; 38794567
ENCS
3 Design Optimization of a Hybrid-Driven Soft Surgical Robot with Biomimetic Constraints Roshanfar M; Dargahi J; Hooshiar A; 38275456
ENCS
4 On the soft tissue ultrasound elastography using FEM based inversion approach Eshaghinia SS; Taghvaeipour A; Aghdam MM; Rivaz H; 38240143
ENCS
5 The influence of inter-bubble spacing on the resonance response of ultrasound contrast agent microbubbles Yusefi H; Helfield B; 36223708
BIOLOGY
6 Optical Fiber Array Sensor for Force Estimation and Localization in TAVI Procedure: Design, Modeling, Analysis and Validation Bandari N; Dargahi J; Packirisamy M; 34450813
ENCS
7 Finite Element Modelling of a Reflection Differential Split-D Eddy Current Probe Scanning Surface Notches. Mohseni E, França DR, Viens M, Xie WF, Xu B 32214578
ENCS
8 Adaptive Neuro-fuzzy Inference System Trained for Sizing Semi-elliptical Notches Scanned by Eddy Currents. Mohseni E, Viens M, Xie WF 31929668
ENCS
9 Influence of Head Tissue Conductivity Uncertainties on EEG Dipole Reconstruction. Vorwerk J, Aydin Ü, Wolters CH, Butson CR 31231178
PERFORM
10 Zoomed MRI Guided by Combined EEG/MEG Source Analysis: A Multimodal Approach for Optimizing Presurgical Epilepsy Work-up and its Application in a Multi-focal Epilepsy Patient Case Study. Aydin Ü, Rampp S, Wollbrink A, Kugel H, Cho J-, Knösche TR, Grova C, Wellmer J, Wolters CH 28510905
PERFORM

 

Title:3D bioheat transfer mapping reveals nanomagnetic particles effectiveness in radiofrequency hyperthermia breast cancer treatment comparing to experimental study
Authors:Kavousi MSaadatmand EMasoumbeigi MMahdavi RRiyahi Alam N
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39557504/
DOI:10.1016/j.medengphy.2024.104249
Publication:Medical engineering & physics
Keywords:3D temperature mappingBreast cancerFinite element analysisHyperthermiaMagnetic nanoparticlesRadiofrequency ablation
PMID:39557504 Category: Date Added:2024-11-19
Dept Affiliation: PHYSICS
1 Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering Department, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences (TUMS), Tehran, Iran. Electronic address: mkavousi@razi.tums.ac.ir.
2 Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering Department, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences (TUMS), Tehran, Iran. Electronic address: esaadatmand@razi.tums.ac.ir.
3 Radiology Department, Faculty of Para-Medicine, Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences, Bandar Abbas, Iran. Electronic address: m.masoumbeigi@gmail.com.
4 Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering Department, School of Medicine, Iran University of Medical Sciences (IUMS), Tehran, Iran; Omid Tehran Radiation Oncology Clinics, Tehran, Iran.
5 Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering Department, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences (TUMS), Tehran, Iran; PERFORM Preventive Medicine and Health Care Center, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Medical Pharmaceutical Sciences Research Center (MPRC), The institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tehran University of Medical Sciences (TUMS), Tehran, Iran. Electronic address: riahinad@sina.tums.ac.ir.

Description:

Radiofrequency (RF) hyperthermia has been widely used for tumor ablation since magnetic-fluid-hyperthermia (MFH) can be utilized for increasing temperature in tumor-region as a complementary-method for hyperthermia. In this study, the effectiveness of using the magnetite-nanoparticles (Fe3O4) in RF hyperthermia for breast cancer (BC) treatment by determining 3D-temperature-distribution using bioheat-transfer-mapping was evaluated. A breast-phantom with a tumor region was placed in an RF-device with 13.56 MHz frequency in different states (with and without-nanomagnetite). Parallelly, the calculations of the RF-wave and bioheat-equation were accomplished by numerical-simulation and finite-element-method (FEM) in COMSOL-software. The temperature differences were experimentally measured at different points of the phantom with a precision of 0.1 °C, with temperature of 3.6 °C and 6.1 °C in without and with nanomagnetic conditions in tumor area, respectively, and also for normal area with temperature of 1.8 °C and 1.9 °C in non-presence and presence states of 0.05 gr magnetite for both conditions, respectively. Moreover, the difference between the simulation and the experimental results was 0.54-1.1 %. The conformity between temperature measurement in experimental and simulation studies in tumor and normal areas showed the effectiveness of the application of MNPs for RF hyperthermia in tissue equivalent breast phantom. Finally, the positive effect of 0.05 gr of MNPs on BC treatment was confirmed.





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