Multilayered non-invasive temperature estimation from backscattered ultrasound


Autoria(s): Teixeira, C. A.; Ruano, M. Graca; Ruano, A. E.; Pereira, W. C. A.
Data(s)

14/02/2013

14/02/2013

2008

26/01/2013

Identificador

Teixeira, Cesar A.; Ruano, Maria Graça; Ruano, A. E.; Pereira, Wagner C. Multilayered non-invasive temperature estimation from backscattered ultrasound, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 123, 5, 3227-3227, 2008.

0001-4966

AUT: MRU00118; ARU00698;

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/2353

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Tipo

article

Resumo

Roughly one in four breast cancer survivors report some degree of arm oedema. Lymphoedema is a build-up of excess lymph fluids in the tissues. Persistent lymphoedema leads to pain, diminished limb function, increased risk of infection, soft tissue fibrosis, and severe cases can be grossly disfiguring. From a mechanics perspective, the lymphoedemous tissue may be thought of as a two phase composite, consisting of both fluid and solid phases. Here we discuss the use of composites mixture theory to model the mechanics of lymphoedemous tissues. By treating the tissue as a fluid-solid composite, rules-of-mixtures may be used to estimate the effective moduli in terms of the properties of the individual components and their respective volume fractions in these two states.