Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morcelles, Kaue Felipe
Publication Date: 2021
Format: Master thesis
Language: por
Source: Repositório Institucional da Udesc
Download full: https://repositorio.udesc.br/handle/UDESC/16034
Summary: Human tissue bioprinting is one of the most exciting fields in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. It consists in the automatic manufacture of three-dimensional biological structures, which can then be applied in patient specific tissue replacement, drug development and more reliable in vitro biological models. One limitation of tissue bioprinting is the lack of non-destructive, real-time and remote methods to monitor the evolution of cells and tissue during the maturation process. This thesis describes the development of a non-invasive and remote sensor to evaluate bioprinted tissue evolution in real-time using EIT. The prototype consists of an electrode sensor, an analog front-end and a digital unit. The electrode sensor is made of 16 gold-surface signal electrodes arranged in a circular configuration, with a ground electrode at the center, and a polypropylene cylinder fixed around the array to act as a culture well. The analog front-end is composed of three stages: the commutation module, the excitation circuit and the voltage sensor circuit. The commutation module is based on the AD75019 cross-point switch, allowing arbitrary selection of electrodes for excitation and sensing via serial control. The excitation circuit consists of a Differential Howland Current Source with a transconductance of 150 µS, optimized for low output common-mode operation. The source operates with square-wave signals at 10 and 100 kHz. The voltage sensing circuit is composed of two input buffers, a differential VGA and a fourth-order antialiasing filter, based on the differential multiple-feedback topology. The sensing circuit provides selectable gain from 0 to 80 dB with cut-off frequency of 1 MHz. The STM32F303ZE microcontroller was the core of the digital unit, providing analog-to-digital conversion, gain control, channel selection, data preprocessing and communication with the host via UART protocol. To validate the prototype, EIT experiments were performed with biological and bioprinted phantoms. Carrots and apples were used as primary biological materials, and a saline solution with 1.5 S/m was used as background media. A dedicated bioprinter was develop to print the hydrogel phantoms, using an alginate-gelatin bioink. To collect the boundary voltages, the adjacent measurement protocol was used, with injection currents of approximately 310 µA at 10 and 100 kHz. Both TDEIT and FDEIT were tested. A MATLAB interface was developed to control the prototype and reconstruct the images, using the Iterative Total Variation Regularization algorithm. Both interface and reconstruction algorithms were developed on top of the EIDORS library. The proposed system was capable of reconstructing the EIT images for all the phantom structures. From the TDEIT images, information about the position, size and orientation of the phantom could be obtained. Moreover, it was possible to differentiate the biological tissue from the bioprinted hydrogel structure using FDEIT, which is fundamental to track the cell growth inside the scaffold. However, the use of a 2D EIT limited the performance of the device, resulting in poor shape identification capabilities, and the use of static vegetable phantoms is not optimal to represent tissue growth in vitro. Therefore, future works will focus on developing 3D EIT algorithms and testing the device with bioprinted human tissue.
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spelling Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomographyEngenharia elétricaBioengenhariaImpedância bioelétricaDiagnóstico não invasivoHuman tissue bioprinting is one of the most exciting fields in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. It consists in the automatic manufacture of three-dimensional biological structures, which can then be applied in patient specific tissue replacement, drug development and more reliable in vitro biological models. One limitation of tissue bioprinting is the lack of non-destructive, real-time and remote methods to monitor the evolution of cells and tissue during the maturation process. This thesis describes the development of a non-invasive and remote sensor to evaluate bioprinted tissue evolution in real-time using EIT. The prototype consists of an electrode sensor, an analog front-end and a digital unit. The electrode sensor is made of 16 gold-surface signal electrodes arranged in a circular configuration, with a ground electrode at the center, and a polypropylene cylinder fixed around the array to act as a culture well. The analog front-end is composed of three stages: the commutation module, the excitation circuit and the voltage sensor circuit. The commutation module is based on the AD75019 cross-point switch, allowing arbitrary selection of electrodes for excitation and sensing via serial control. The excitation circuit consists of a Differential Howland Current Source with a transconductance of 150 µS, optimized for low output common-mode operation. The source operates with square-wave signals at 10 and 100 kHz. The voltage sensing circuit is composed of two input buffers, a differential VGA and a fourth-order antialiasing filter, based on the differential multiple-feedback topology. The sensing circuit provides selectable gain from 0 to 80 dB with cut-off frequency of 1 MHz. The STM32F303ZE microcontroller was the core of the digital unit, providing analog-to-digital conversion, gain control, channel selection, data preprocessing and communication with the host via UART protocol. To validate the prototype, EIT experiments were performed with biological and bioprinted phantoms. Carrots and apples were used as primary biological materials, and a saline solution with 1.5 S/m was used as background media. A dedicated bioprinter was develop to print the hydrogel phantoms, using an alginate-gelatin bioink. To collect the boundary voltages, the adjacent measurement protocol was used, with injection currents of approximately 310 µA at 10 and 100 kHz. Both TDEIT and FDEIT were tested. A MATLAB interface was developed to control the prototype and reconstruct the images, using the Iterative Total Variation Regularization algorithm. Both interface and reconstruction algorithms were developed on top of the EIDORS library. The proposed system was capable of reconstructing the EIT images for all the phantom structures. From the TDEIT images, information about the position, size and orientation of the phantom could be obtained. Moreover, it was possible to differentiate the biological tissue from the bioprinted hydrogel structure using FDEIT, which is fundamental to track the cell growth inside the scaffold. However, the use of a 2D EIT limited the performance of the device, resulting in poor shape identification capabilities, and the use of static vegetable phantoms is not optimal to represent tissue growth in vitro. Therefore, future works will focus on developing 3D EIT algorithms and testing the device with bioprinted human tissue.Bertemes Filho, PedroMorcelles, Kaue Felipe2025-01-24T19:04:16Z2021info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesis1 recurso online ( 129 p.)application/pdfMORCELLES, Kaue Felipe. <b>Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography</b>. 2025. Dissertação (Curso de Engenharia Elétrica) - Udesc, 2021. Disponível em: https://repositorio.udesc.br/handle/UDESC/16034. Acesso em: insira aqui a data de acesso ao material. Ex: 18 fev. 2025.https://repositorio.udesc.br/handle/UDESC/16034Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Brazilhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/br/info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessporreponame:Repositório Institucional da Udescinstname:Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC)instacron:UDESC2025-01-25T06:33:35Zoai:repositorio.udesc.br:UDESC/16034Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertaçõeshttps://pergamumweb.udesc.br/biblioteca/index.phpPRIhttps://repositorio-api.udesc.br/server/oai/requestri@udesc.bropendoar:63912025-01-25T06:33:35Repositório Institucional da Udesc - Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
title Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
spellingShingle Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
Morcelles, Kaue Felipe
Engenharia elétrica
Bioengenharia
Impedância bioelétrica
Diagnóstico não invasivo
title_short Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
title_full Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
title_fullStr Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
title_full_unstemmed Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
title_sort Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography
author Morcelles, Kaue Felipe
author_facet Morcelles, Kaue Felipe
author_role author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Bertemes Filho, Pedro
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Morcelles, Kaue Felipe
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Engenharia elétrica
Bioengenharia
Impedância bioelétrica
Diagnóstico não invasivo
topic Engenharia elétrica
Bioengenharia
Impedância bioelétrica
Diagnóstico não invasivo
description Human tissue bioprinting is one of the most exciting fields in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. It consists in the automatic manufacture of three-dimensional biological structures, which can then be applied in patient specific tissue replacement, drug development and more reliable in vitro biological models. One limitation of tissue bioprinting is the lack of non-destructive, real-time and remote methods to monitor the evolution of cells and tissue during the maturation process. This thesis describes the development of a non-invasive and remote sensor to evaluate bioprinted tissue evolution in real-time using EIT. The prototype consists of an electrode sensor, an analog front-end and a digital unit. The electrode sensor is made of 16 gold-surface signal electrodes arranged in a circular configuration, with a ground electrode at the center, and a polypropylene cylinder fixed around the array to act as a culture well. The analog front-end is composed of three stages: the commutation module, the excitation circuit and the voltage sensor circuit. The commutation module is based on the AD75019 cross-point switch, allowing arbitrary selection of electrodes for excitation and sensing via serial control. The excitation circuit consists of a Differential Howland Current Source with a transconductance of 150 µS, optimized for low output common-mode operation. The source operates with square-wave signals at 10 and 100 kHz. The voltage sensing circuit is composed of two input buffers, a differential VGA and a fourth-order antialiasing filter, based on the differential multiple-feedback topology. The sensing circuit provides selectable gain from 0 to 80 dB with cut-off frequency of 1 MHz. The STM32F303ZE microcontroller was the core of the digital unit, providing analog-to-digital conversion, gain control, channel selection, data preprocessing and communication with the host via UART protocol. To validate the prototype, EIT experiments were performed with biological and bioprinted phantoms. Carrots and apples were used as primary biological materials, and a saline solution with 1.5 S/m was used as background media. A dedicated bioprinter was develop to print the hydrogel phantoms, using an alginate-gelatin bioink. To collect the boundary voltages, the adjacent measurement protocol was used, with injection currents of approximately 310 µA at 10 and 100 kHz. Both TDEIT and FDEIT were tested. A MATLAB interface was developed to control the prototype and reconstruct the images, using the Iterative Total Variation Regularization algorithm. Both interface and reconstruction algorithms were developed on top of the EIDORS library. The proposed system was capable of reconstructing the EIT images for all the phantom structures. From the TDEIT images, information about the position, size and orientation of the phantom could be obtained. Moreover, it was possible to differentiate the biological tissue from the bioprinted hydrogel structure using FDEIT, which is fundamental to track the cell growth inside the scaffold. However, the use of a 2D EIT limited the performance of the device, resulting in poor shape identification capabilities, and the use of static vegetable phantoms is not optimal to represent tissue growth in vitro. Therefore, future works will focus on developing 3D EIT algorithms and testing the device with bioprinted human tissue.
publishDate 2021
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2021
2025-01-24T19:04:16Z
dc.type.status.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesis
format masterThesis
status_str publishedVersion
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv MORCELLES, Kaue Felipe. <b>Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography</b>. 2025. Dissertação (Curso de Engenharia Elétrica) - Udesc, 2021. Disponível em: https://repositorio.udesc.br/handle/UDESC/16034. Acesso em: insira aqui a data de acesso ao material. Ex: 18 fev. 2025.
https://repositorio.udesc.br/handle/UDESC/16034
identifier_str_mv MORCELLES, Kaue Felipe. <b>Real-time monitoring device for 4d bioprinting based on electrical impedance tomography</b>. 2025. Dissertação (Curso de Engenharia Elétrica) - Udesc, 2021. Disponível em: https://repositorio.udesc.br/handle/UDESC/16034. Acesso em: insira aqui a data de acesso ao material. Ex: 18 fev. 2025.
url https://repositorio.udesc.br/handle/UDESC/16034
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv por
language por
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Brazil
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/br/
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Brazil
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/br/
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv 1 recurso online ( 129 p.)
application/pdf
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv reponame:Repositório Institucional da Udesc
instname:Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC)
instacron:UDESC
instname_str Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC)
instacron_str UDESC
institution UDESC
reponame_str Repositório Institucional da Udesc
collection Repositório Institucional da Udesc
repository.name.fl_str_mv Repositório Institucional da Udesc - Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina (UDESC)
repository.mail.fl_str_mv ri@udesc.br
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