In vivo electric conductivity of cervical cancer patients based on B 1+ maps at 3T MRI

Journal Article (2016)
Author(s)

E Balidemaj (External organisation)

P de Boer (External organisation)

ALHMW van Lier (External organisation)

R.F. Remis (TU Delft - Signal Processing Systems)

Lukas J.A. Stalpers (External organisation)

GH Westerveld (External organisation)

A.A.J. Nederveen (TU Delft - Management Support)

CAT van den Berg (External organisation)

J Crezee (External organisation)

Research Group
Signal Processing Systems
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/61/4/1596
More Info
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Research Group
Signal Processing Systems
Issue number
4
Volume number
61
Pages (from-to)
1596-1607

Abstract

The in vivo electric conductivity (σ) values of tissue are essential for accurate electromagnetic simulations and specific absorption rate (SAR) assessment for applications such as thermal dose computations in hyperthermia. Currently used σ-values are mostly based on ex vivo measurements. In this study the conductivity of human muscle, bladder content and cervical tumors is acquired non-invasively in vivo using MRI. The conductivity of 20 cervical cancer patients was measured with the MR-based electric properties tomography method on a standard 3T MRI system. The average in vivo σ-value of muscle is 14% higher than currently used in human simulation models. The σ-value of bladder content is an order of magnitude higher than the value for bladder wall tissue that is used for the complete bladder in many models. Our findings are confirmed by various in vivo animal studies from the literature. In cervical tumors, the observed average conductivity was 13% higher than the literature value reported for cervical tissue. Considerable deviations were found for the electrical conductivity observed in this study and the commonly used values for SAR assessment, emphasizing the importance of acquiring in vivo conductivity for more accurate SAR assessment in various applications.

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