Icaro dos Santos, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

  • Milwaukee WI UNITED STATES
  • Allen Bradley Hall of Science S326
  • Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Dr. Icaro dos Santos is an expert in embedded systems, medical devices and finite element modeling.

Contact

Education, Licensure and Certification

Ph.D.

Electrical and Computer Engineering

University of Texas at Austin

2003

M.S.

Electrical Engineering

Universidade de Brasilia

2000

B.S.

Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Universidade Federal da Paraiba

1998

Biography

Dr. Icaro dos Santos is an associate professor in MSOE's Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department. He joined the MSOE faculty In 2016 after serving as a professor at universities in Brazil and the United States, and gaining industry experience as the CEO of Sleeping Apnea LLC and chief research officer of Astus Medical Manufacturing, among other industry positions.

Accomplishments

Scholarship for high productivity in applied research for the industry, CNPq, Brazil

2012

Social

Media Appearances

Dr. Icaro dos Santos

MSOE News  

2019-10-24

“I always enjoyed practical applications of electrical engineering in medical devices and wanted to share my enthusiasm and experience with students,” said dos Santos.

He shares his passion of practical applications with students during lab. “My favorite part about being a professor is going to the lab and making things work!”

View More

Research Grants

Grant

Ministry of Health- Brazil

2009 to 2015

Brazilian National Health Surveillance Agency

Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária (ANVISA)

2012 to June 2015

Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

2010

Show All +

Selected Publications

A Modeling Study on Inspired CO2 Rebreathing Device for Sleep Apnea Treatment by Means of CFD Analysis and Experiment

Journal of Medical and Biological Engineering

Shokoueinejad, M., Pazouki, A., Levin, J., Wang, F., Fernandez, C., Rusk, S., dos Santos, Í., Mulchrone, A., Dempsey, J., Webster, J.G.,

2017

We present the device design, simulation, and measurement results of a therapy device that potentially prevents sleep apnea by slightly increasing inspired CO2 through added dead space (DS). The rationale for treatment of sleep apnea with CO2 manipulation is based on two recently reported premises: (i) preventing transient reductions in PaCO2 will prevent the patient from reaching their apneic threshold, thereby preventing “central” apnea and instabilities in respiratory motor output; and (ii) raising PaCO2 and end-tidal CO2, even by a minimal amount, provides a strong recruitment of upper airway dilator muscles, thereby preventing airway obstruction. We have also provided the simulation results, obtained from solving the Navier–Stokes (NS) equations within the device volume. Therein, the NS equations are coupled with a convection–diffusion equation that represents the transport of CO2 in the device, thus enabling the transient simulation of CO2 propagation. Using this procedure, a prototype of variable volume dead space reservoir device was designed. Volumetric factors influencing carbon dioxide increases in the added reservoir (open-ended DS) were investigated. The maximum/minimum amount of CO2 concentration were obtained for the maximum/minimum device volume; 3.4 and 2.4 mol/m3 for the DS volumes of 1.2 and 0.5 × 10−3 m3, respectively. In all case studies, the CO2 buildup reached a plateau after approximately 20 breathing cycles. The experimental measurement results are in agreement with the simulation and numerical results obtained using the proposed simplified modeling technique, with a maximum relative error of 3.5%.

View more

Probabilistic Finite Element Analysis of Radiofrequency Liver Ablation Using the Unscented Transform

Physics in Medicine and Biology

Dos Santos, I., Haemmerich, D., Schutt, D., da Rocha, A.F., Menezes, L.R.

2009

The main limitation of radiofrequency (RF) ablation numerical simulations reported in the literature is their failure to provide statistical results based on the statistical variability of tissue thermal-electrical parameters. This work developed an efficient probabilistic approach to hepatic RF ablation in order to statistically evaluate the effect of four thermal-electrical properties of liver tissue on the uncertainty of the ablation zone dimensions: thermal conductivity, specific heat, blood perfusion and electrical conductivity. A deterministic thermal-electrical finite element model of a monopolar electrode inserted in the liver was coupled with the unscented transform method in order to obtain coagulation zone confidence intervals, probability and cumulative density functions. The coagulation zone volume, diameter and length were 10.96 cm(3), 2.17 cm and 4.08 cm, respectively (P < 0.01). Furthermore, a probabilistic sensitivity analysis showed that perfusion and thermal conductivity account for >95% of the variability in coagulation zone volume, diameter and length.

View more

A Surgical Device for Radiofrequency Ablation of Large Liver Tumors

Physiological Measurement

Dos Santos, I., Correia, D., Soares, A.J.M., Góes, J.A., Da Rocha, A.F., Schutt, D., Haemmerich, D.

2008

Radiofrequency ablation has become an accepted treatment option of patients with primary and metastatic liver tumors. We propose an ablation electrode array consisting of 4–8 blade shaped electrodes arranged in a circular geometry for the treatment of large liver tumors. We developed a 3D code based on the finite difference method for evaluating the effect of different numbers of electrodes (4, 6 and 8) and electrode distance on lesion size. The configuration with six electrodes can ablate a volume of 70 × 70 × 40 mm3 in approximately 5 min, with tissue temperature above 50 °C throughout the treatment volume. We then performed an experimental study in polyacrylamide gel in order to validate the theoretical results. The average temperature error between the simulation and the experiment was 3.8% at the center of the electrode array. This study shows that the proposed device potentially allows more rapid treatment of large tumors than current radiofrequency ablation devices.

View more

Show All +
Powered by