Use of Electrical Impedance Tomography to Monitor Regional Cerebral Edema during Clinical Dehydration Treatment |
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Authors: | Feng Fu Bing Li Meng Dai Shi-Jie Hu Xia Li Can-Hua Xu Bing Wang Bin Yang Meng-Xing Tang Xiu-Zhen Dong Zhou Fei Xue-Tao Shi |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Fourth Military Medical University, Xi''an, China.; 2. Neurosurgical Unit of Xijing Hospital, Fourth Military Medical University, Xi''an, China.; 3. Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.; Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary, |
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Abstract: | ObjectiveVariations of conductive fluid content in brain tissue (e.g. cerebral edema) change tissue impedance and can potentially be measured by Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT), an emerging medical imaging technique. The objective of this work is to establish the feasibility of using EIT as an imaging tool for monitoring brain fluid content.Designa prospective study.SettingIn this study EIT was used, for the first time, to monitor variations in cerebral fluid content in a clinical model with patients undergoing clinical dehydration treatment. The EIT system was developed in house and its imaging sensitivity and spatial resolution were evaluated on a saline-filled tank.Patients23 patients with brain edema.InterventionsThe patients were continuously imaged by EIT for two hours after initiation of dehydration treatment using 0.5 g/kg intravenous infusion of mannitol for 20 minutes.Measurement and Main ResultsOverall impedance across the brain increased significantly before and after mannitol dehydration treatment (p = 0.0027). Of the all 23 patients, 14 showed high-level impedance increase and maintained this around 4 hours after the dehydration treatment whereas the other 9 also showed great impedance gain during the treatment but it gradually decreased after the treatment. Further analysis of the regions of interest in the EIT images revealed that diseased regions, identified on corresponding CT images, showed significantly less impedance changes than normal regions during the monitoring period, indicating variations in different patients'' responses to such treatment.ConclusionsEIT shows potential promise as an imaging tool for real-time and non-invasive monitoring of brain edema patients. |
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