A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Bronchial thermoplasty is a novel technique designed to reduce an airway's ability to contract by reducing the amount of airway smooth muscle through controlled heating of the airway wall. This method has been examined in animal...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brown Robert H, Wizeman Bill, Jarrard Jerry, Mitzner Wayne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-11-01
Series:BioMedical Engineering OnLine
Online Access:http://www.biomedical-engineering-online.com/content/9/1/81
id doaj-06c44982fb8c449cb6454b01b5367ff6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-06c44982fb8c449cb6454b01b5367ff62020-11-24T21:34:32ZengBMCBioMedical Engineering OnLine1475-925X2010-11-01918110.1186/1475-925X-9-81A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validationBrown Robert HWizeman BillJarrard JerryMitzner Wayne<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Bronchial thermoplasty is a novel technique designed to reduce an airway's ability to contract by reducing the amount of airway smooth muscle through controlled heating of the airway wall. This method has been examined in animal models and as a treatment for asthma in human subjects. At the present time, there has been little research published about how radiofrequency (RF) energy and heat is transferred to the airways of the lung during bronchial thermoplasty procedures. In this manuscript we describe a computational, theoretical model of the delivery of RF energy to the airway wall.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>An electro-thermal finite-element-analysis model was designed to simulate the delivery of temperature controlled RF energy to airway walls of the in vivo lung. The model includes predictions of heat generation due to RF joule heating and transfer of heat within an airway wall due to thermal conduction. To implement the model, we use known physical characteristics and dimensions of the airway and lung tissues. The model predictions were tested with measurements of temperature, impedance, energy, and power in an experimental canine model.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Model predictions of electrode temperature, voltage, and current, along with tissue impedance and delivered energy were compared to experiment measurements and were within ± 5% of experimental averages taken over 157 sample activations.</p> <p>The experimental results show remarkable agreement with the model predictions, and thus validate the use of this model to predict the heat generation and transfer within the airway wall following bronchial thermoplasty.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The model also demonstrated the importance of evaporation as a loss term that affected both electrical measurements and heat distribution. The model predictions showed excellent agreement with the empirical results, and thus support using the model to develop the next generation of devices for bronchial thermoplasty. Our results suggest that comparing model results to RF generator electrical measurements may be a useful tool in the early evaluation of a model.</p> http://www.biomedical-engineering-online.com/content/9/1/81
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brown Robert H
Wizeman Bill
Jarrard Jerry
Mitzner Wayne
spellingShingle Brown Robert H
Wizeman Bill
Jarrard Jerry
Mitzner Wayne
A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation
BioMedical Engineering OnLine
author_facet Brown Robert H
Wizeman Bill
Jarrard Jerry
Mitzner Wayne
author_sort Brown Robert H
title A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation
title_short A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation
title_full A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation
title_fullStr A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation
title_full_unstemmed A theoretical model of the application of RF energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation
title_sort theoretical model of the application of rf energy to the airway wall and its experimental validation
publisher BMC
series BioMedical Engineering OnLine
issn 1475-925X
publishDate 2010-11-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Bronchial thermoplasty is a novel technique designed to reduce an airway's ability to contract by reducing the amount of airway smooth muscle through controlled heating of the airway wall. This method has been examined in animal models and as a treatment for asthma in human subjects. At the present time, there has been little research published about how radiofrequency (RF) energy and heat is transferred to the airways of the lung during bronchial thermoplasty procedures. In this manuscript we describe a computational, theoretical model of the delivery of RF energy to the airway wall.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>An electro-thermal finite-element-analysis model was designed to simulate the delivery of temperature controlled RF energy to airway walls of the in vivo lung. The model includes predictions of heat generation due to RF joule heating and transfer of heat within an airway wall due to thermal conduction. To implement the model, we use known physical characteristics and dimensions of the airway and lung tissues. The model predictions were tested with measurements of temperature, impedance, energy, and power in an experimental canine model.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Model predictions of electrode temperature, voltage, and current, along with tissue impedance and delivered energy were compared to experiment measurements and were within ± 5% of experimental averages taken over 157 sample activations.</p> <p>The experimental results show remarkable agreement with the model predictions, and thus validate the use of this model to predict the heat generation and transfer within the airway wall following bronchial thermoplasty.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The model also demonstrated the importance of evaporation as a loss term that affected both electrical measurements and heat distribution. The model predictions showed excellent agreement with the empirical results, and thus support using the model to develop the next generation of devices for bronchial thermoplasty. Our results suggest that comparing model results to RF generator electrical measurements may be a useful tool in the early evaluation of a model.</p>
url http://www.biomedical-engineering-online.com/content/9/1/81
work_keys_str_mv AT brownroberth atheoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
AT wizemanbill atheoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
AT jarrardjerry atheoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
AT mitznerwayne atheoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
AT brownroberth theoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
AT wizemanbill theoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
AT jarrardjerry theoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
AT mitznerwayne theoreticalmodeloftheapplicationofrfenergytotheairwaywallanditsexperimentalvalidation
_version_ 1725948962727264256