TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermosensitive Implant for Magnetic Hyperthermia by Mixing Micro-Magnetic and Nano-Magnetic Particles
AU - Tonthat, Loi
AU - Yamamoto, Yoshiyuki
AU - Aki, Fumitaka
AU - Saito, Hajime
AU - Mitobe, Kazutaka
N1 - Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGMENT This work was supported by the Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI) through the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science under Grant 16J09640 and Grant 15K01277.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 IEEE.
PY - 2018/6
Y1 - 2018/6
N2 - Recently, self-controlled heating mediators were widely investigated for magnetic hyperthermia. In our previous studies, we succeeded in developing a ferromagnetic implant with low Curie temperature (FILCT). Then, to improve the heating efficiency of FILCT, we coated it with gold. By utilizing the temperature-dependent permeability of FILCT, we proposed a wireless temperature measurement. However, the gold coating layer decreases the change in magnetic flux density caused by FILCT, thus decreasing the accuracy of the thermometry. Therefore, we attempted to use nano-magnetic particles with high heating efficiency instead of gold coating. In this paper, FILCT particles with an average diameter of 83.6 μm were mixed with a commercially available nano-ferrofluid named Resovist (maghemite particles with an average diameter of 3.6 nm) and a lab-made nano-ferrofluid (magnetite particles with an average diameter of 13.9 nm), respectively. The proposed mixture was evaluated compared to FILCT under a magnetic field (500 kHz and 4.73 kA/m). The results show that the heating efficiency of the mixture using Resovist was superior to that of FILCT (approximately 15 times). More importantly, the change in magnetic flux density caused by its permeability was enhanced compared to FILCT (1.2 times). The results also show that a similar tendency was obtained when using both types of nano-ferrofluid.
AB - Recently, self-controlled heating mediators were widely investigated for magnetic hyperthermia. In our previous studies, we succeeded in developing a ferromagnetic implant with low Curie temperature (FILCT). Then, to improve the heating efficiency of FILCT, we coated it with gold. By utilizing the temperature-dependent permeability of FILCT, we proposed a wireless temperature measurement. However, the gold coating layer decreases the change in magnetic flux density caused by FILCT, thus decreasing the accuracy of the thermometry. Therefore, we attempted to use nano-magnetic particles with high heating efficiency instead of gold coating. In this paper, FILCT particles with an average diameter of 83.6 μm were mixed with a commercially available nano-ferrofluid named Resovist (maghemite particles with an average diameter of 3.6 nm) and a lab-made nano-ferrofluid (magnetite particles with an average diameter of 13.9 nm), respectively. The proposed mixture was evaluated compared to FILCT under a magnetic field (500 kHz and 4.73 kA/m). The results show that the heating efficiency of the mixture using Resovist was superior to that of FILCT (approximately 15 times). More importantly, the change in magnetic flux density caused by its permeability was enhanced compared to FILCT (1.2 times). The results also show that a similar tendency was obtained when using both types of nano-ferrofluid.
KW - Ferromagnetic implant
KW - hyperthermia
KW - low Curie temperature
KW - micro-/nano-magnetic particles
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U2 - 10.1109/TMAG.2018.2821271
DO - 10.1109/TMAG.2018.2821271
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85045997676
VL - 54
JO - IEEE Transactions on Magnetics
JF - IEEE Transactions on Magnetics
SN - 0018-9464
IS - 6
M1 - 5400104
ER -