Publication | Closed Access
An Optimal Sliding Choke Antenna for Hepatic Microwave Ablation
68
Citations
28
References
2009
Year
Spherical AblationEngineeringHealth SciencesMedical ImagingRadio FrequencyAntennaRadiofrequency HeatingAntenna DesignMicrowave AntennaSmart AntennaMwa Antenna DesignsHepatic Microwave AblationComputational ElectromagneticsBiomedical EngineeringMicrowave AblationMicrowave EngineeringRadiologyElectromagnetic Compatibility
Microwave ablation (MWA) is a minimally invasive technique increasingly used for thermal therapy of liver tumors. Effective MWA requires efficient interstitial antennas that destroy tumors and a margin of healthy tissue, in situ, while minimizing damage to the rest of the organ. Previously, we presented a method for optimizing MWA antenna designs by coupling finite element method models of antennas with a real-coded, multiobjective genetic algorithm. We utilized this procedure to optimize the design of a minimally invasive choke antenna that can be used to create near-spherical ablation zones of adjustable size (radius 1-2 cm) by adjusting treatment durations and a sliding structure of the antenna. Computational results were validated with experiments in ex vivo bovine liver. The optimization procedure yielded antennas with reflection coefficients below -30 dB, which were capable of creating spherical ablation zones up to 2 cm in radius using 100 W input power at 2.45 GHz with treatment durations under 2 min.
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