Computer methods and programs in biomedicine | 2021

A Non-Fourier Bioheat Transfer Model for Cryosurgery of Tumor Tissue with Minimum Collateral Damage

 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES\nIncorporation of non-Fourier heat conduction while studying heat transfer phenomena in biological materials has emerged has an important approach as it predicts better and more realistic results than Fourier based models. In this article we have proposed a non-Fourier computational model and applied the same to simulate cryosurgery of lung tumor and attempted minimization of freezing damage of healthy lung tissue using pulsed laser irradiation.\n\n\nMETHODS\nA non-Fourier bioheat transfer model for phase change in biological tissues is solved via a Fourier heat conduction based solution approach. A unified model is proposed combining all variants of bioheat models: Fourier s heat conduction based Pennes bioheat model, hyperbolic heat conduction model and dual phase lag model. The proposed model takes into account the different thermophysical properties of frozen and unfrozen regions. In order to mimic the actual biotransport process, the blood perfusion and metabolic heat generation are switched off in the frozen region. Implicit source based enthalpy method is used to model phase change process. A new iterative enthalpy update equation is developed for capturing evolution of freezing front implicitly. Finite Volume based numerical discretization technique is used to discretize the governing PDE. The resulting discrete algebraic equation set is solved implicitly by Tri-diagonal Matrix Algorithm. The proposed model is verified with existing results from the literature.\n\n\nRESULTS\nFor Fourier heat conduction, freezing time of 99.99% of tumor is 1247s, which increases to 1267s for τq= 5s (τT= 0s) and again reduces to 1255s for τq= 5s and τT= 3s. τq and τT are phase lag parameters for non-Fourier heat conduction. For τq= 5s and τT= 0.05s, the freezing damage of healthy tissue decreases by 23.76% when pulsed laser irradiation (Io\u202f=\u202f106 W/m2) is used to warm the neighboring healthy tissue.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nSo non-Fourier bioheat transport models are better and more accurate in predicting temperature history, freezing time and freezing front propagation as compared to Fourier based models. Pulsed laser irradiation can prove to be a very efficient technique in minimizing collateral damage during cryosurgery.

Volume None
Pages \n 105857\n
DOI 10.1016/j.cmpb.2020.105857
Language English
Journal Computer methods and programs in biomedicine

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