Breast cancer is the most aggressive and common cause of death among women around the world, and an early diagnosis is fundamental to increase the survival chances. Microwave and mm-wave imaging systems have been recently proposed as a possible technique for cancer detection, on the grounds of the different dielectric permittivity between healthy and neoplastic tissues. To support the experimental development of such systems, phantoms able to mimic the different dielectric permittivity are required. In addition, the possibility to provide, at the same time, mechanical properties similar to those of real tissues would be beneficial to deliver phantoms as realistic as possible. In this paper, two simple and easy-to-produce mixtures able to mimic the dielectric properties of neoplastic breast tissue are presented; their dielectric properties are compared to the ones derived from human neoplastic ex-vivo samples and their mechanical properties are tested. In particular, two different percentages of gelling material are used and both the dielectric and mechanical material properties are measured, demonstrating the possibility to tune the Young's module of the samples.
Simona Di MeoEmanuele TortiElisa MarenziRoberto GandolfiMarco PasianFrancesco Leporati
Jordan KrenkevichGabrielle FontaineEvelyne HluszokTyson ReimerStephen Pistorius
Jordan KrenkevichGabrielle FontaineTyson ReimerStephen Pistorius
Simona Di MeoAlessia CannatàCarolina Blanco-AnguloGiulia MatroneAndrea Martínez-LozanoJ. M. AriasJosé María Sabater-NavarroR. GutiérrezHéctor García GarcíaErnesto Ávila-NavarroMarco Pasian