Jump to content

TissueDB/Materials/Chia Seeds

From Appropedia


Chia seeds in a package for medical simulation
Chia seeds used as small discrete lesion analogs in ultrasound and palpation training phantoms. Image: CC BY-SA 3.0 by Ton adam, via Wikimedia Commons.

GFDL and CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Chia seeds are small, firm spherical seeds used in medical simulation to represent small nodules, calcifications, or discrete lesion analogs within tissue phantoms for ultrasound-guided procedures and palpation training.

Tissues

Tissue Visual Tactile Simulator Notes
Breast lesion (small) Partial Yes Embed in agar matrix for palpation training. Firm spherical geometry approximates small nodules.
Thyroid nodule (microcalcification) Partial Partial Mix in gel for fine-target ultrasound practice.



Alternatives

Alternative Best For Trade-offs
Cherry Tomatoes Larger lesion targets Larger size, different texture
Cocktail Onions Medium lesion sizes Less firm
Silicone nodules Reusable, consistent sizing Higher cost, preparation required


References

[edit source]


At a Glance

Overview

[edit source]

Synonyms

[edit source]

Common names: Chia seeds, Chia, Salvia hispanica seeds

Forms: Whole chia seeds, Soaked chia seeds, Chia gel, Ground chia

Regional terms: Graines de chia (French), Semillas de chía (Spanish), Chiasamen (German), Semi di chia (Italian), Chiazaad (Dutch)


Background

Clinical Context for Simulation

[edit source]

Processing & Preparation

[edit source]

Safety Considerations

[edit source]
[edit source]
Page data
Keywords chia seeds, ultrasound, small nodules, phantom, TissueDB, lesion simulation, microcalcification
SDG
Authors Arturopelayo
License CC-BY-SA-4.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 0 pages link here
Views 8 page views (analytics)
Created January 31, 2026 by Arturo Pelayo
Last edit May 25, 2026 by Arturo Pelayo


Page data
SDG
Authors Arturopelayo
License CC-BY-SA-4.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 0 pages link here
Views 8 page views (analytics)
Created January 31, 2026 by Arturo Pelayo
Last edit May 25, 2026 by Arturo Pelayo
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.