Author:
Huang Jing,Chen Feng,Wang Ke,Chen Sheng
Abstract
Currently, there is an urgent need for a fast and portable intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) detection technology for pre-hospital emergency scenarios. Owing to the disproportionately elevated permittivity of blood compared to other brain tissues, Electrical Capacitance Tomography (ECT) offers a viable modality for mapping the spatial distribution of permittivity within the brain, thus facilitating the imaging-based identification of ICH. Currently, ECT is confined to time-differential imaging due to limited sensitivity, and this methodology requires non-hemorrhagic measurements for comparison, data that are frequently inaccessible in clinical contexts. To overcome this limitation, in accordance with the natural bilateral symmetry of the cerebral hemispheres, a symmetrical cancellation scheme is introduced. In this method, electrodes are uniformly arrayed around the cranial periphery and strategically positioned in a symmetrical manner relative to the sagittal suture. Subsequently, the measured capacitances for each electrode pair are subtracted from those of their symmetrical counterparts aligned with the sagittal suture. As a result, this process isolates the capacitance attributable solely to hemorrhagic events within a given hemisphere, permitting the absolute imaging of ICH. To assess the feasibility of this method, simulation and empirical imaging were conducted respectively on a numerical hemorrhage model and three physical models (a water-wrapped hemorrhage model, an isolated porcine fat-wrapped hemorrhage model, and an isolated porcine brain tissue-wrapped hemorrhage model). Traditional absolute imaging, time-differential imaging and symmetrical cancellation imaging were performed on all models. The results substantiate that the proposed imaging modality is capable of obtaining absolute imaging of ICH. But a mirrored artifact, symmetrical to the site of the actual hemorrhage image appeared in each of the imaging results. This mirror artifact was characterized by identical dimensions and an inverted pixel-value schema, an intrinsic consequence of the symmetrical cancellation imaging algorithm. The real image of hemorrhage can be ascertained through pre-judgment with the symptoms of the patient. Additionally, the quality of this imaging is seriously dependent on the precise alignment between the electrodes and the sagittal suture of the brain; even a minor deviation in symmetry could introduce excessive noises. Thus, the complicated operational procedures remain as challenges for practical application.