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Fast computation of soft tissue thermal response under deformation based on fast explicit dynamics finite element algorithm for surgical simulation (1911.11845v2)

Published 26 Nov 2019 in cs.CE

Abstract: During thermal heating surgical procedures such as electrosurgery, thermal ablative treatment and hyperthermia, soft tissue deformation due to tool-tissue interaction and patients' motion can affect the distribution of induced thermal energy. Tissue temperature must be efficiently and accurately obtained from deformed tissues for precise thermal energy delivery; however, the classical Pennes bio-heat transfer can handle only the static non-moving state of soft tissue. This paper presents a formulation of bio-heat transfer under the effect of tissue deformation for fast or near real-time tissue temperature computation, based on fast explicit dynamics finite element algorithm for transient heat transfer. The proposed computation is achieved by transformation of the unknown deformed tissue state to the known initial non-moving state via a mapping function. The appropriateness and effectiveness of the proposed methodology are evaluated on a realistic virtual human liver with blood vessels to demonstrate a clinically relevant scenario of thermal ablation of hepatic cancer. Compared against the established non-linear procedures from commercial finite element analysis package, ABAQUS/CAE, the proposed methodology can achieve a typical 1.0e-3 level of normalized relative error at nodes and between 1.0e-4 and 1.0e-5 level of total errors, which is in good agreement with ABAQUS solutions. The proposed method consumes slightly more time than the formulation without soft tissue deformation, and computation performance of five different formulations are examined. The proposed method can be applied with bio-mechanical deformable models for fast or near real-time computation of non-linear bio-heat transfer, leading to translational potential in dynamic tissue temperature predictive analysis and thermal dosimetry computation for computer-integrated medical education and personalized treatments.

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