304 7.8 Biomedical Physics Tools
7.7.4 TISSUE ACOUSTICS
The measure of resistance to acoustic propagation via phonon waves in biological tissue is
the acoustic impendence parameter. This is the complex ratio of the acoustic pressure to the
volume flow rate. The acoustic impendence in different animal tissues can vary by two orders
of magnitude, from the lungs at the low end (which obviously contain significant quantities of
air) and the bone at the high end, and is thus a useful physical metric for the discrimination of
different tissue types, especially useful at the boundary interface of different tissue types since
these often result in an acoustic mismatch that is manifested as a high acoustic reflectance,
whose reflection signal (i.e., echo) can thus be detected. For example, a muscle–fat interface
has a typical reflectance of only ~1%; however, a bone–fat interface is more like ~50%, and
any soft water-based tissue with air has a reflectance of ~99.9%. This is utilized in various
forms of ultrasound imaging.
KEY POINT 7.7
Bulk tissue measurements do not allow fine levels of tissue heterogeneity to be
investigated, in that as an ensemble technique, their spatial precision is ultimately
limited by the relatively macroscopic length scale of the tissue sample and any inference
regarding heterogeneity in general is done indirectly through biophysical modeling;
however, they are often very affordable techniques and relatively easy to configure
experimentally and generate often very stable measurements for several different
ensemble physical quantities, many of which have biomedical applications and can
assist greatly in future experimental strategies of using more expensive and time-
consuming techniques that are better optimized toward investigating heterogeneous
sample features.
7.8 BIOMEDICAL PHYSICS TOOLS
Many bulk tissue techniques have also led to developments in biomedically relevant bio
physical technologies. Whole textbooks are dedicated to specific tools of medical physics,
and for expert insight of how to operate these technologies in a clinical context, I would
encourage the reader to explore the IPEM website (www.ipem.ac.uk), which gives profes
sional and up-to-date guidance of publications and developments in this fast-moving field.
However, the interface between medical physics, that is, that performed in a clinical envir
onment specifically for medical applications, and biophysics, for example for researching
questions of relevance to biological matter using physics tools and techniques, is increas
ingly blurred in the present day due primarily to many biophysics techniques having a
greater technical precision at longer length scales than previously, and similarly for medical
physics technologies experiencing significant technical developments in the other direc
tion of smaller-scale improvements in spatial resolution in particular, such that there is
now noticeable overlap between the length and time scale regimes for these technologies.
A summary of the principle of biophysical techniques relevant to biomedicine is therefore
included here.
7.8.1 MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
MRI is an example of radiology, which is a form of imaging used medically to assist in diag
nosis. MRI uses a large, cooled, electromagnetic coil of diameter up to ~70 cm, which can
generate a high, stable magnetic field at the center of the coil in the range ~1–7 T (which
compares with the Earth’s magnitude field strength of typical magnitude ~50 μT). The phys
ical principles are the same as those of NMR in which the nuclei of atoms in a sample absorb
energy from the external magnetic field (see Chapter 5) and reemit electromagnetic radiation
at an energy equal to the difference in nuclei spin energy states, which is dependent on the
KEY BIOLOGICAL
APPLICATIONS: BULK
SAMPLE BIOPHYSICS TOOLS
Multiple simple, coarse but
robust mean ensemble average
measurements on a range of
different tissue samples.