scholarly journals Ex Vivo Modeling of Perioperative Air Leaks in Porcine Lungs

2018 ◽  
Vol 65 (12) ◽  
pp. 2827-2836
Author(s):  
Charles Klassen ◽  
Chad E. Eckert ◽  
Jordan Wong ◽  
Jacques P. Guyette ◽  
Jason L. Harris ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Ex Vivo ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benedicte Bonnet ◽  
Ilyass Tabiai ◽  
George Rakovich ◽  
Frederick P Gosselin ◽  
Isabelle Villemure

During thoracic operations, surgical staplers resect cancerous tumors and seal the spared lung. However, post-operative air leaks are undesirable clinical consequences: staple legs wound lung tissue. Subsequent to this trauma, air leaks from lung tissue into the pleural space. This affects the lung's physiology and patients' recovery. The objective is to biomechanically and visually characterize porcine lung tissue with and without staples in order to gain knowledge on air leakage following pulmonary resection. Therefore, a syringe pump filled with air inflates and deflates eleven porcine lungs cyclically without exceeding 10 cmH2O of pressure. Cameras capture stereo-images of the deformed lung surface at regular intervals while a microcontroller simultaneously records the alveolar pressure and the volume of air pumped. The raw images are then used to compute tri-dimensional displacements and strains with the Digital Image Correlation method (DIC). Air bubbles originated at staple holes of inner row from exposed porcine lung tissue due to torn pleural on costal surface. Compared during inflation, left upper or lower lobe resections have similar compliance (slope of the pressure vs volume curve), which are 9% lower than healthy lung compliance. However, lower lobes statistically burst at lower pressures than upper lobes (p-value<0.046) in ex vivo conditions confirming previous clinical in vivo studies. In parallel, the lung deformed mostly in the vicinity of staple holes and presented maximum shear strain near the observed leak location. To conclude, a novel technique DIC provided concrete evidence of the post-operative air leaks biomechanics. Further studies could investigate causal relationships between the mechanical parameters and the development of an air leak.


2006 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hendrik Bolte ◽  
Christian Riedel ◽  
Thomas Jahnke ◽  
Nevin Inan ◽  
Sandra Freitag ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Les Bogdanowicz ◽  
Onur Fidaner ◽  
Donato Ceres ◽  
Alex Grycuk ◽  
David Demos

UNSTRUCTURED Lung cancer is the world’s leading cause of cancer deaths, and diagnosis remains challenging. Lung cancer starts as small nodules; early and accurate diagnosis allows timely surgical resection of malignant nodules while avoiding unnecessary surgery in patients with benign nodules. The Cole Relaxation Frequency (CRF) is a derived electrical bioimpedance signature, which may be utilized to distinguish cancerous tissues from normal tissues. Here we show that CRF allows for diagnosis of cancer in human subjects, based on evaluation of 60 specimens obtained from 30 patients. We observed clear discrimination of CRF values in tumor and distant normal tissues, resulting in a high degree of sensitivity (97%) and specificity (87%) in cancer diagnosis. Furthermore, we tested 20 xenograft small animal model specimens, observing a similar separation of CRF values as in the human in-vivo measurements. We also obtained CRF measurements in pressurized and unpressurized lungs by implanting tumors into ex-vivo porcine lungs. CRF measurements align with previous tests in human and small animal models.


Author(s):  
Jan Michael Burg ◽  
Veronika Flatten ◽  
Matthias Witt ◽  
Larissa Derksen ◽  
Uli Weber ◽  
...  

Abstract In particle therapy of lung tumors, modulating effects on the particle beam may occur due to the microscopic structure of the lung tissue. These effects are caused by the heterogeneous nature of the lung tissue and cannot be completely taken into account during treatment planning, because these micro structures are too small to be fully resolved in the planning CT. In several publications, a new material parameter called modulation power (P mod ) was introduced to characterize the effect. For various artificial lung surrogates, this parameter was measured and published by other groups and ranges up to approximately 1000 µm. Studies investigating the influence of the modulation power on the dose distribution during irradiation are using this parameter in the rang of 100 to 800 µm. More precise measurements for P mod on real lung tissue have not yet been published. In this work, the modulation power of real lung tissue was measured using porcine lungs in order to produce more reliable data of P mod for real lung tissue. For this purpose, ex-vivo porcine lungs were frozen in a ventilated state and measurements in a carbon ion beam were performed. Due to the way the lungs were prepared and transferred to a solid state, the lung structures that modulate the beam could also be examined in detail using micro CT imaging. An optimization of the established methods of measuring the modulation power, which takes better account of the typical structures within lung tissue, was developed as well.


2013 ◽  
Vol 32 (11) ◽  
pp. 1123-1130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glen P. Westall ◽  
Browyn J. Levvey ◽  
Evelyn Salvaris ◽  
Julian Gooi ◽  
Sylvana Marasco ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 82 (5) ◽  
pp. 681-688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karsten Wiebe ◽  
Mehmet Oezkur ◽  
Jochen P??ling ◽  
Axel Haverich

2013 ◽  
Vol 46 (28) ◽  
pp. 34-39
Author(s):  
Matthias Frohner ◽  
Michael Windisch ◽  
Stefan Sauermann ◽  
Jiři Sekora ◽  
Mathias Forjan
Keyword(s):  
Ex Vivo ◽  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Les Bogdanowicz ◽  
Onur Fidaner ◽  
Donato Ceres ◽  
Alex Grycuk ◽  
Davis Demos

Abstract Lung cancer is the world’s leading cause of cancer deaths, and diagnosis remains challenging. Lung cancer starts as small nodules; early and accurate diagnosis allows timely surgical resection of malignant nodules while avoiding unnecessary surgery in patients with benign nodules. The Cole Relaxation Frequency (CRF) is a derived electrical bioimpedance signature, which may be utilized to distinguish cancerous tissues from normal tissues. Here we show that CRF allows for diagnosis of cancer in human subjects, based on evaluation of 60 specimens obtained from 30 patients. We observed clear discrimination of CRF values in tumor and distant normal tissues, resulting in a high degree of sensitivity (97%) and specificity (87%) in cancer diagnosis. Furthermore, we tested 20 xenograft small animal model specimens, observing a similar separation of CRF values as in the human in-vivo measurements. We also obtained CRF measurements in pressurized and unpressurized lungs by implanting tumors into ex-vivo porcine lungs. CRF measurements align with previous tests in human and small animal models.


Author(s):  
Bénédicte Bonnet ◽  
Ilyass Tabiai ◽  
George Rakovich ◽  
Frédérick P. Gosselin ◽  
Isabelle Villemure
Keyword(s):  

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