scispace - formally typeset
Reference EntryDOI

Electric properties of tissues

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The electrical properties of biological tissues and cell pensions have been of interest for over a century for manyreasons, such as the ability to determine the pathways of current flow through the body and, thus, are very important in theanalysis of a wide range of biomedical applications such as functional electrical stimulation and the diagnosis and treatment of various physiological conditions with weakelectric currents, radiofrequency hyperthermia, electro-cardiography, and body composition as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
1. INTRODUCTIONThe electrical properties of biological tissues and cell sus-pensions have been of interest for over a century for manyreasons. They determine the pathways of current flowthrough the body and, thus, are very important in theanalysis of a wide range of biomedical applications such asfunctional electrical stimulation and the diagnosis andtreatment of various physiological conditions with weakelectric currents, radio-frequency hyperthermia, electro-cardiography, and body composition. On a more funda-mental level, knowledge of these electrical properties canlead to an understanding of the underlying basic biologicalprocesses. Indeed, biological impedance studies have longbeen important in electrophysiology and biophysics; one ofthe first demonstrations of the existence of the cell mem-brane was based on dielectric studies on cell suspensions(1).To analyze the response of a tissue to electric stimula-tion, we need data on the specific conductivities and rel-ative permittivities of the tissues or organs. A microscopicdescription of the response is complicated by the variety ofcell shapes and their distribution inside the tissue as wellas the different properties of the extracellular media.Therefore, a macroscopic approach is most often used tocharacterize field distributions in biological systems.Moreover, even on a macroscopic level, the electrical prop-erties are complicated. They can depend on the tissue ori-entation relative to the applied field (directionalanisotropy), the frequency of the applied field (the tissueis neither a perfect dielectric nor a perfect conductor), orthey can be time- and space-dependent (e.g., changes intissue conductivity during electropermeabilization).2. BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS IN AN ELECTRIC FIELDThe electrical properties of any material, including bio-logical tissue, can be broadly separated into two catego-ries: conducting and insulating. In a conductor, theelectric charges move freely in response to the applicationof an electric field, whereas in an insulator (dielectric), thecharges are fixed and not free to move. A more detaileddiscussion of the fundamental processes underlying theelectrical properties of tissue can be found in Foster andSchwan (2).If a conductor is placed in an electric field, charges willmove within the conductor until the interior field is zero.In the case of an insulator, no free charges exist, so netmigration of charge does not occur. In polar materials,however, the positive and negative charge centers in themolecules do not coincide. An electric dipole moment, p,issaid to exist. An applied field, E

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

The Application of Electric Fields in Biology and Medicine

TL;DR: A fieldtransduction mechanism that shares features common to the detection of fluid shear by cells is described that is used to improve the healing of wounds, the stimulation of neurons, and the positioning and activation of cells on scaffolds for tissue engineering purposes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical study of the influence of water evaporation on radiofrequency ablation

TL;DR: A 2D symmetric cylindrical mathematical model simulates the water evaporation and diffusion during radiofrequency ablation and may be used for better clinical design of radiofrequency equipment and treatment protocol planning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical and economic evaluation of modulated electrohyperthermia concurrent to dose-dense temozolomide 21/28 days regimen in the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma: a retrospective analysis of a two-centre German cohort trial with systematic comparison and effect-to-treatment analysis

Sergey V Roussakow
- 01 Nov 2017 - 
TL;DR: After confirmation of the results, mEHT could be recommended for the treatment of recurrent GBM as a cost-effective enhancer of ddTMZ regimens, and, probably, of the regular 5/28 days regimen.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical resistance of human soft tissue sarcomas: an ex vivo study on surgical specimens

TL;DR: These results may be used to verify whether tuning electric field intensity according to the specific STS histotype could improve tissue electroporation and ultimately treatment efficacy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling and Characterization of Capacitive Elements With Tissue as Dielectric Material for Wireless Powering of Neural Implants

TL;DR: The modeling and characterization results accurately capture the effect of the thickness and electrical properties of the coating layers on the behavior of the capacitive elements over frequency and with different tissues.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The dielectric properties of biological tissues: II. Measurements in the frequency range 10 Hz to 20 GHz

TL;DR: Three experimental techniques based on automatic swept-frequency network and impedance analysers were used to measure the dielectric properties of tissue in the frequency range 10 Hz to 20 GHz, demonstrating that good agreement was achieved between measurements using the three pieces of equipment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The dielectric properties of biological tissues: III. Parametric models for the dielectric spectrum of tissues

TL;DR: A parametric model was developed to enable the prediction of dielectric data that are in line with those contained in the vast body of literature on the subject.
Journal ArticleDOI

The dielectric properties of biological tissues: I. Literature survey

TL;DR: The dielectric properties of tissues have been extracted from the literature of the past five decades and presented in a graphical format to assess the current state of knowledge, expose the gaps there are and provide a basis for the evaluation and analysis of corresponding data from an on-going measurement programme.
Journal ArticleDOI

The specific resistance of biological material—A compendium of data for the biomedical engineer and physiologist

TL;DR: The paper traces the history of, and tabulates determinations of the electrical resistivity of blood, other body fluids, cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle, lung, kidney, liver, spleen, pancreas, nervous tissue, fat, bone, and other miscellaneous tissues.
Journal Article

Dielectric properties of tissues and biological materials: a critical review.

TL;DR: The classical principles behind dielectric relaxation are summarized, as empirical correlations with tissue water content in other compositional variables, and a comprehensive table is presented of dielectrics properties.
Related Papers (5)