Thermal characteristics of microwave ablation in the vicinity of an arterial bifurcation

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Abstract

Purpose: The objective of this research was to reveal the thermal characteristics of microwave ablations in the vicinity of an arterial bifurcation. Methods: The temperature distribution after microwave heating of a liver-like material in the close proximity of an arterial bifurcation was simulated using the finite element method. Coupled fluid flow and solid heat transfer were taken into consideration and a three-dimensional analysis was performed. An experimentally determined SAR (specific absorption rate) generated by the absorption of microwaves in liver-like material was used in the analysis instead of utilizing electromagnetic calculations. Several different tests of time-controlled ablations with varying distances between the microwave antenna and the bifurcation were performed and detailed temperature distributions near the bifurcation were obtained. Results: The interaction between the recirculation flow in the bifurcation and the heat transfer in the surrounding tissue makes the temperature distribution near the bifurcation complicated. Most importantly, after a period of continuous heating with constant microwave output power, the maximum temperatures caused by the ablation did not always increase with the distance between the antenna and the bifurcation. Conclusion: It can be concluded that inadequate ablations can be the result not only from a close proximity between the antenna and the blood vessel, but also from a complicated blood flow in large vessels whose structure causes recirculation flow.

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Liu, Y. J., Qiao, A. K., Nan, Q., & Yang, X. Y. (2006). Thermal characteristics of microwave ablation in the vicinity of an arterial bifurcation. International Journal of Hyperthermia, 22(6), 491–506. https://doi.org/10.1080/02656730600905686

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