Experimental Study of Cerebral Hemorrhage Imaging Based on Frequency-Differential Electrical Capacitance Tomography | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Experimental Study of Cerebral Hemorrhage Imaging Based on Frequency-Differential Electrical Capacitance Tomography


Abstract:

Currently, electrical capacitance tomography (ECT) is limited to time-differential imaging for monitoring dynamic alterations in cerebral hemorrhage. The inherent constra...Show More

Abstract:

Currently, electrical capacitance tomography (ECT) is limited to time-differential imaging for monitoring dynamic alterations in cerebral hemorrhage. The inherent constraint of this approach, however, renders it unsuitable for rapid hemorrhage detection, as it requires a reference measurement from a nonhemorrhaging brain. In order to address this limitation, this study proposes a novel approach of frequency-differential ECT (FDECT) for cerebral hemorrhage imaging in practice. The method entails the identification of a frequency range wherein the permittivity variation of cerebral blood with frequency is much greater than the variation of other brain tissues. Within this identified range, two optimal frequencies are selected, and the permittivity difference at these two frequencies is used for imaging. With this method, cerebral hemorrhage is highlighted, and other brain tissues are suppressed, thereby achieving the absolute distribution of cerebral hemorrhage and eliminating the need for nonhemorrhagic baseline data. Simulation results demonstrate that FDECT imaging quality correlates directly with the frequency-dependent permittivity difference between the target and background media, thereby validating FDECT’s theoretical basis and highlighting the critical role of optimal frequency selection. Before conducting in vitro animal imaging, we analyzed the dielectric spectra of ex vivo sheep blood, pig fat, and pig brain tissue to identify the optimal frequency range for differentiating blood from these tissues. In vitro experiments confirmed that FDECT with the optimal frequencies effectively images blood within pig fat or brain tissue, contrasting with the suboptimal results from nonideal frequencies. Although essential for FDECT success, optimal frequency pairing does not eliminate the higher noise levels in FDECT images, largely due to the background brain tissue’s frequency-dependent dielectric characteristics. In order to mitigate this inherent limitation and imp...
Article Sequence Number: 4508514
Date of Publication: 16 April 2025

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