Metabolic Heat Generation And Loss

2018 ◽  
pp. 189-194
Author(s):  
Edward K. Yeargers
Author(s):  
Helcio R.B. Orlande ◽  
Nelson Afonso Lutaif ◽  
José Antonio Rocha Gontijo

2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (05) ◽  
pp. 1650064 ◽  
Author(s):  
MIR AIJAZ ◽  
M. A. KHANDAY

The physiological processes taking place in human body are disturbed by the abnormal changes in climate. The changes in environmental temperature are not effective only to compete with thermal stability of the system but also in the development of thermal injuries at the skin surfaces. Therefore, it is of great importance to estimate the temperature distribution and thermal damage in human peripherals at extreme temperatures. In this paper, the epidermis, dermis and subcutaneous tissue were modeled as uniform elements with distinct thermal properties. The bioheat equation with appropriate boundary conditions has been used to estimate the temperature profiles at the nodal points of the skin and subcutaneous tissue with variable ambient heat and metabolic activities. The model has been solved by variational finite element method and the results of the changes in temperature distribution of the body and the damage to the exposed living tissues has been interpreted graphically in relation with various atmospheric temperatures and rate of metabolic heat generation. By involving the metabolic heat generation term in bioheat equation and using the finite element approach the results obtained in this paper are more reasonable and appropriate than the results developed by Moritz and Henriques, Diller and Hayes, and Jiang et al.


Author(s):  
Haile Baye Kassahun ◽  
Henok Tadesse Moges ◽  
Amanuel Shigut Dinsa ◽  
Wubshet Shimels Negussie ◽  
Okebiorun Michael Oluwaseyi ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 132 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shadi Mahjoob ◽  
Kambiz Vafai

Abstract A comprehensive analysis of bioheat transport through a double layer and multilayer biological media is presented in this work. Analytical solutions have been developed for blood and tissue phase temperatures and overall heat exchange correlations, incorporating thermal conduction in tissue and vascular system, blood-tissue convective heat exchange, metabolic heat generation, and imposed heat flux, utilizing both local thermal nonequilibrium and equilibrium models in porous media theory. Detailed solutions as well as Nusselt number distributions are given, for the first time, for two primary conditions, namely, isolated core region and uniform core temperature. The solutions incorporate the pertinent effective parameters for each layer, such as volume fraction of the vascular space, ratio of the blood, and the tissue matrix thermal conductivities, interfacial blood-tissue heat exchange, tissue/organ depth, arterial flow rate and temperature, body core temperature, imposed hyperthermia heat flux, metabolic heat generation, and blood physical properties. Interface temperature profiles are also obtained based on the continuity of temperature and heat flux through the interface and the physics of the problem. Comparisons between these analytical solutions and limiting cases from previous works display an excellent agreement. These analytical solutions establish a comprehensive presentation of bioheat transport, which can be used to clarify various physical phenomena as well as establishing a detailed benchmark for future works in this area.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonalika Singh ◽  
Sushil Kumar

The effect of metabolic heat generation on the freezing of biological tissue has been studied. Quasi-steady approximation is used to solve the Pennes bioheat equation in tissues. Temperature profile and motion of freezing interfaces are obtained for different values of metabolic heat generation. It is observed that metabolism has a significant effect on freezing of biological tissues during cryosurgery.


1997 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 146-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Rabin ◽  
A. Shitzer

A new combined solution of the one-dimensional inverse Stefan problem in biological tissues is presented. The tissue is assumed to be a nonideal material in which phase transition occurs over a temperature range. The solution includes the thermal effects of blood perfusion and metabolic heat generation. The analysis combines a heat balance integral solution in the frozen region and a numerical enthalpy-based solution approach in the unfrozen region. The subregion of phase transition is included in the unfrozen region. Thermal effects of blood perfusion and metabolic heat generation are assumed to be temperature dependent and present in the unfrozen region only. An arbitrary initial condition is assumed that renders the solution useful for cryosurgical applications employing repeated freezing/thawing cycles. Very good agreement is obtained between the combined and an exact solution of a similar problem with constant thermophysical properties and a uniform initial condition. The solution indicated that blood perfusion does not appreciably affect either the shape of the temperature forcing function on the cryoprobe or the location and depth of penetration of the freezing front in peripheral tissues. It does, however, have a major influence on the freezing/thawing cycle duration, which is most pronounced during the thawing stage. The cooling rate imposed at the freezing front also has a major inverse effect on the duration of the freezing/thawing.


Author(s):  
Bogdan Khapko

A problem on finding temperature field in the boundary layer of biological body when blood perfusion coefficient depends on coordinate is solved. Temperature distribution is caused by the temperature differences between the inside and outside of a body and by the outside heat sources and metabolic heat generation. Heat transfer problem is formulated by using generalized Heaviside functions. Applying the variation of constants method this problem is reduced to the Fredholm integral equation of the second kind. Numerical method of Simpson quadratures was used to solve integral equation. Analysis of temperature distribution in the boundary layer for some cases of boundary conditions is performed. Dependence on temperature inside body from metabolic heat generation and outside heat source is analyzed.


Author(s):  
Obdulia Ley ◽  
Yildiz Bayazitoglu

Brain temperature control is important in clinical therapy, because moderate temperature reduction of brain temperature increases the survival rate after head trauma. A factor that affects the brain temperature distribution is the cerebral blood flow, which is controlled by autoregulatory mechanisms. To improve the existing thermal models of brain, we incorporate the effect of the temperature over the metabolic heat generation, and the regulatory processes that control the cerebral blood perfusion and depend on physiological parameters like, the mean arterial blood pressure, the partial pressure of oxygen, the partial pressure of carbon dioxide, and the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption. The introduction of these parameters in a thermal model gives information about how specific conditions, such as brain edema, hypoxia, hypercapnia, or hypotension, affect the temperature distribution within the brain. Existing biological thermal models of the human brain, assume constant blood perfusion, and neglect metabolic heat generation or consider it constant, which is a valid assumption for healthy tissue. But during sickness, trauma or under the effect of drugs like anesthetics, the metabolic activity and organ blood flow vary considerably, and such variations must be accounted for in order to achieve accurate thermal modeling. Our work, on a layered head model, shows that variations of the physiological parameters have profound effect on the temperature gradients within the head.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document