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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23572
Title: Application of First Order Unimolecular Rate Kinetics to Interstitial Laser Photocoagulation
Authors: Poepping, Tamie
Advisor: Wyman, Douglas
Department: Medical Physics
Keywords: first order unimolecular;rate kinetics;interstitial laser coagulation;coagulation;laser;unimolecular rate kinetics;kinetics
Publication Date: 1996
Abstract: An investigation of the temperature response and corresponding lesion growth resulting from in vivo interstitial laser photocoagulation was performed in order to test the applicability of Arrhenius theory. The irradiations were performed in vivo in rabbit muscle for various exposures at 1.0W using an 805 nm diode laser source coupled to an optical fibre with a pre-charred tip, thereby forcing it to function as a point heat source. Temperature responses were measured using a five-microthermocouple array along a range of radial distances from the point heat source. Each temperature profile was fitted with a curve predicted by the Weinbaum-Jiji bioheat transfer equation. The lesions were resected 48 hours after irradiation and the boundary of thermal damage resulting in necrosis was determined histologically. Numerical integration of the Arrhenius integral using temperature-time data at the lesion boundary produced corresponding activation energy and pre-exponential factor pairs (Ea , a) consistent with reported values for various other endpoints and tissue types. As well, theoretical predictions of the lesion growth from Arrhenius theory agreed well with experimental results. However, the thermal parameters, which are generally assumed to be constant when solving the bioheat transfer equation, were found to vary with radial distance from the source, presumably due to a dependence on temperature.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23572
Appears in Collections:Digitized Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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