A printed Yagi-Uda antenna for application in magnetic resonance thermometry guided microwave hyperthermia applicators

Biological studies and clinical trials show that addition of hyperthermia stimulates conventional cancer treatment modalities and significantly improves treatment outcome. This supra-additive stimulation can be optimized by adaptive hyperthermia to counteract strong and dynamic thermoregulation. The...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physics in medicine & biology 2017-03, Vol.62 (5), p.1831-1847
Hauptverfasser: Paulides, M M, Mestrom, R M C, Salim, G, Adela, B B, Numan, W C M, Drizdal, T, Yeo, D T B, Smolders, A B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Biological studies and clinical trials show that addition of hyperthermia stimulates conventional cancer treatment modalities and significantly improves treatment outcome. This supra-additive stimulation can be optimized by adaptive hyperthermia to counteract strong and dynamic thermoregulation. The only clinically proven method for the 3D non-invasive temperature monitoring required is by magnetic resonance (MR) temperature imaging, but the currently available set of MR compatible hyperthermia applicators lack the degree of heat control required. In this work, we present the design and validation of a high-frequency (433 MHz ISM band) printed circuit board antenna with a very low MR-footprint. This design is ideally suited for use in a range of hyperthermia applicator configurations. Experiments emulating the clinical situation show excellent matching properties of the antenna over a 7.2% bandwidth (S11  
ISSN:0031-9155
1361-6560
DOI:10.1088/1361-6560/aa56b3