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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Optimal Control of Thermal Damage to Biological Materials

Gayzik, F. Scott 07 October 2004 (has links)
Hyperthermia is a cancer treatment modality that raises cancerous tissue to cytotoxic temperature levels for roughly 30 to 45 minutes. Hyperthermia treatment planning refers to the use of computational models to optimize the heating protocol to be used in a hyperthermia treatment. This thesis presents a method to optimize a hyperthermia treatment heating protocol. An algorithm is developed which recovers a heating protocol that will cause a desired amount of thermal damage within a region of tissue. The optimization algorithm is validated experimentally on an albumen tissue phantom. The transient temperature distribution within the region is simulated using a two-dimensional, finite-difference model of the Pennes bioheat equation. The relationship between temperature and time is integrated to produce a damage field according to two different models; Henriques'' model and the thermal dose model (Moritz and Henriques (1947)), (Sapareto and Dewey (1984)). A minimization algorithm is developed which re duces the value of an objective function based on the squared difference between an optimal and calculated damage field. Either damage model can be used in the minimization algorithm. The adjoint problem in conjunction with the conjugate gradient method is used to minimize the objective function of the control problem. The flexibility of the minimization algorithm is proven experimentally and through a variety of simulations. With regards to the validation experiment, the optimal and recovered regions of permanent thermal damage are in good agreement for each test performed. A sensitivity analysis of the finite difference and damage models shows that the experimentally-obtained extent of damage is consistently within a tolerable error range. Excellent agreement between the optimal and recovered damage fields is also found in simulations of hyperthermia treatments on perfused tissue. A simplified and complex model of the human skin were created for use within the algorithm. Minimizations using both the Henriques'' model and the thermal dose model in the objective function are performed. The Henriques'' damage model was found to be more desirable for use in the minimization algorithm than the thermal dose model because it is less computationally intensive and includes a mechanism to predict the threshold of permanent thermal damage. The performance of the minimization algorithm was not hindered by adding complexity to the skin model. The method presented here for optimizing hyperthermia treatments is shown to be robust and merits further investigation using more complicated patient models. / Master of Science

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