Electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) in the urinary bladder: The effect of inflammation and edema on identification of malignancy
Date
2002Author
Smallwood, RH
Keshtkar, A
Wilkinson, BA
Lee, JA
Hamdy, FC
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Previous studies have shown that tetrapolar electrical impedance spectroscopy measurements can identify cervical interstitial neoplasia with the same sensitivity and specificity as cervical smears. In the urinary bladder, the same technique yields significant differences (p < 0.05 at seven frequencies between 9.6 and 614 kHz) between normal and malignant urothelium, but is unable to classify individual measurements. Detailed histological examination demonstrates that inflammation and edema - both of which are common in abnormal urothelium - alter the impedance spectrum significantly in opposing directions. Consideration of morphological changes in abnormal urothelium suggests alternative measurement strategies.
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Modelling the electrical properties of bladder tissue - Quantifying impedance changes due to inflammation and oedema
Walker, DC; Smallwood, RH; Keshtar, A; Wilkinson, BA; Hamdy, FC; Lee, JA (2005)Electrical impedance spectroscopy has been developed as a potential method for the diagnosis of carcinoma in epithelial tissues. An understanding of the influence of structural changes in the tissue on the properties ... -
The effect of applied pressure on the electrical impedance of the bladder tissue using small and large probes
Keshtkar, A; Keshtkar, A (2008)There are a number of studies using electrical impedance spectroscopy, a minimally invasive technique, as a tissue characterizing method with different probe sizes (usually with larger probe diameters than that used in ... -
Electrical impedance spectroscopy and the diagnosis of bladder pathology.
Keshtkar, A; Keshtkar, A; Smallwood, RH (2006)Bladder pathology is usually investigated visually by cystoscopy. At present, definitive diagnosis of the bladder can be made by biopsy only, usually under general anaesthesia. This is a relatively high-cost procedure in ...