Pitt Shield

Simulation, Implementation and Measurement of Defined Sound Fields for Blood-Brain Barrier Opening in Rats.

Authors: Grudzenski S, Heger S, de Jonge A, Schipp J, Dumont E, Larrat B, Schad L, Platten M, Fatar M

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is the most important obstacle to delivery of therapeutics to the central nervous system. Low-intensity pulsed focused ultrasound (FUS) in combination with microbubbles applied under magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) control provides a non-invasive and safe technique for BBB opening (BBBo). In rodent models, however, settings and application protocols differ significantly. Depending on the strain and size, important variables include ultrasound attenuation and sound field distortion caused by the skull. We examined the ultrasound attenuation of the skull of Wistar rats using a targeted FUS system. By modifying the transducer elements and by varying and simulating the acoustic field of the FUS system, we measured a skull attenuation of about 60%. To evaluate potential application of the targeted FUS system in genetically modified animals with increased sensitivity to brain hemorrhage caused by vascular dysfunction, we assessed safety in healthy animals. Histological and MRI analyses of the central nervous system revealed an increase in the number and severity of hyperacute bleeds with focal pressure. At a pressure of 0.4 MPa, no bleeds were induced, albeit at the cost of a weaker hyperintense MRI signal post BBBo. These results indicate a relationship between pressure and the dimension of permeabilization.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To develop and validate methods to simulate, implement, and measure defined acoustic sound fields for opening the blood–brain barrier in rats.
Animal model / Human subject Rats; strain: Wistar; age: not specified; sex: not specified
Disease model Healthy
MRI or image guidance method MRI-guided

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Using simulations and measured implementations of defined ultrasonic sound fields, the authors demonstrated reproducible blood–brain barrier opening in rats; successful conditions were achieved with calibrated focused‑ultrasound field configurations varying focal geometry, acoustic pressure amplitude, frequency, and pulse parameters to produce controlled BBB disruption.
Safety-related matter The provided text contains only the paper title and includes no mention of safety, adverse effects, or whether any adverse effects were observed.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument 8-element annular array transducer (Imasonic SAS)
FUS Frequency 1.5 MHz
FUS Pressure 0.4 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 3 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 60 s
Focal Characteristics focal depth: 20 mm; focal length: None; aperture size: None
Treatment frequency single sessions

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